In London, Paris and Frankfurt, markets closed almost 2% higher,
while Wall Street finished up as oil prices had their biggest one-day
gain this year.

Confidence was boosted when the head of Europe's central bank promised action to steady the eurozone if necessary.
It offset fears about the falling oil price and worries about global growth.
London's FTSE 100 index of leading shares closed up nearly 1.77%, while the main markets in France and Germany rose 1.97% and 1.94%.
Earlier, Japan's main share index closed down by more than 2%.
On Wednesday, global stock markets suffered hefty losses and London's FTSE 100 ended the day down 3.5%.
By doing so it entered a "bear market", having fallen 20% from its record high in April last year.
Oil Market
Comments by European Central Bank president Mario Draghi helped to steady investors' nerves.
He hinted that the ECB could do more to stimulate the eurozone economy, saying there were "no limits" to action if necessary.
The oil price also recovered, although it remains at around 12-year lows.
Brent crude rose 5.9% to $29.52 a barrel. In the US, West Texas Intermediate Crude rose 5.3% briefly breaking back above $30 a barrel before settling at $29.79.
Oil
prices have been falling since mid 2014, but oil-producing countries
have maintained output despite the decline, contributing to the excess
supplies on the market.
Earlier in the week, the International Energy Agency warned that oil markets could "drown in oversupply" in 2016.
'Good shape'
Patrick Thomson from JP Morgan Asset Management told the BBC that investors should not panic.
"If you look at the US economy particularly, that is actually in pretty good shape," he said.
"You
look at all of the data coming out recently, clearly growth is a little
muted and corporate earnings are somewhat lower than expected due to
energy prices and the strong dollar, but underlying fundamentals,
particularly the US consumer, is in very good shape."
That message
was echoed by analysts Capital Economics, which said: "Despite the
prevailing gloom about the world economy, we think global growth will
pick up from around 2.5% last year to 3% in both 2016 and 2017, using
our own estimates for China."




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