By Twesha Dikshit

May 7 (Reuters) – European shares were steady on Thursday after a sharp rally in the previous session, as investors assessed the prospects of a U.S.-Iran peace deal ‌and digested a slew of corporate earnings.

The pan-European STOXX 600 was little changed at 623.59 ‌points, as of 0810 GMT. Most major regional bourses traded higher, with France’s CAC 40 up 0.3%, while London’s FTSE 100 ​fell 0.5%.

The European benchmark’s rally on Wednesday left it about 2% below levels seen before the start of the Middle East war. Energy-dependent European markets have lagged global peers since the conflict began, while AI-driven optimism has boosted other major indexes to record highs.

U.S. President Donald Trump predicted a swift end to the war ‌as Tehran considered a U.S. peace proposal ⁠that is expected to end the conflict while leaving Iran’s nuclear programme and the reopening of the Strait of Hormuz unresolved.

“Regardless of the back and forth, it’s ⁠the closest that the U.S. and Iran have been to potentially getting a peace deal and that’s what’s driving the positive momentum in markets this morning,” said Daniela Hathorn, senior market analyst at Capital.com.

“There’s been hardly any ​instances ​where the U.S. stock market has been trading with ​a bearish bias, whereas for Europe throughout the ‌second half of (April), it’s been a continuous bearish bias on the back of worsening talks.”

Oil major Shell dipped 3.9% after it reported first-quarter profit that beat expectations, but reduced the pace of its quarterly share buyback programme. Peer BP was down 1.8%, while the energy index fell 1.2%.

Luxury shares gained 2.5% after being under pressure this year. LVMH, Hermes and Kering were up between 2.5% and 2.9%.

Spirits group Campari ‌tumbled 11% after the Italian firm’s first-quarter revenue was below ​expectations. Peers Diageo and Pernod Ricard lost over 1%, while ​the beverages index dropped 1.1%.

Euro zone financial ​integration has made steady progress in the past few years but the region’s equity ‌markets remain fragmented, the European Central Bank ​said in a report.

Among other ​movers, Rheinmetall shares dropped 3.1%. The German defence firm reported first-quarter results and said it had submitted a bid to buy German Naval Yards Kiel.

Persil maker Henkel jumped 4% after the ​German firm met sales expectations for ‌the first quarter.

Shares of Siemens Healthineers tumbled 3.7% after the medical-tech company cut its full-year ​outlook due to structural changes in the Chinese market and pronounced inflation expectations.

(Reporting by ​Twesha Dikshit; Editing by Harikrishnan Nair and Sonia Cheema)