By Sudip Kar-Gupta
LONDON (Reuters) - Weak oil prices and a fall in the shares of Burberry knocked back European stock markets on Thursday.
The pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index, which had risen 2.6 percent to a one-month high in the previous session, slipped back 0.2 percent.
The FTSEurofirst remains down by around 6 percent since the start of 2016, as concerns about a China-led economic slowdown have hit world stock markets and commodity prices, given China's role as a major consumer of oil and metals.
Oil prices fell on Thursday as OPEC warned of slowing demand and Russia hinted that there might only be a loose agreement with little commitments at the upcoming exporter meeting to rein in ballooning oversupply.
That in turn pushed down the shares of energy companies such as BP and Total.
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"The lower oil price is not helping markets today. We've had a good move up of late, but there's just a bit more caution creeping in now," said Hantec Markets' analyst Richard Perry.
Burberry slumped 7 percent after the British luxury goods group reported a fall in second-half sales.
"Near term, Burberry has high exposure to weakest areas of luxury demand: 38 percent of global sales to Chinese customers versus 30 percent industry average, 27 percent sales exposure to U.S.," Liberum analysts wrote in a note, keeping a "sell" rating on Burberry.
Unilever's shares also dipped after the consumer goods company posted a drop in turnover, although shares in Nestle rose more than 1 percent after the Swiss food company posted first-quarter numbers ahead of forecasts.
(Editing by Alison Williams)