
Europe bulletin: stocks dip on Iran fears, BBC seeks Trump toss, Spain deepfake law
European markets ended Tuesday slightly lower as rising Iran tensions and political uncertainty in the US kept investors on edge.
The BBC is also fighting back in court, seeking to dismiss President Trump’s $10 billion defamation lawsuit on jurisdiction and “actual malice” grounds.
Meanwhile, Spain moved to tighten rules on AI deepfakes, setting tougher consent standards and stronger protections for minors.
In France, farmers intensified protests against the EU-Mercosur trade deal ahead of key votes.
European stock slips amid Iran-Powell jitters
European equities finished Tuesday’s session in cautious retreat, with the Stoxx 600 sliding 0.2% as geopolitical tensions in Iran and an escalating criminal investigation into Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell rattled investor sentiment.
Major regional exchanges reflected the broader hesitation, each moving in different directions amid the crosscurrents of policy uncertainty and political drama unfolding stateside.
However, not all stocks surrendered ground. Danish renewable energy firm Orsted surged 5.4% after a US court sided with the company, clearing it to resume a suspended $5 billion offshore wind project that had become collateral damage in the Trump administration’s energy pivot.
The mixed close underscores how macro headwinds are clashing with sector-specific tailwinds in an increasingly fragmented market.
BBC seeks dismissal of Trump suit
The BBC moved Monday to have President Trump’s $10 billion defamation lawsuit dismissed, signaling an aggressive courtroom strategy.
Filed in Miami federal court, the motion challenges the judge’s jurisdiction, arguing the documentary, which aired in Britain, not Florida, cannot trigger US legal liability.
The broadcaster’s legal team contends Trump suffered zero damages: he won reelection decisively and carried Florida by 13 points after the broadcast aired.
Moreover, the BBC disputes Trump’s claim that the program appeared on BritBox, stating it was never available there.
The real jaw-clencher: the BBC maintains Trump can’t prove “actual malice,” a stringent legal test required for public figures seeking defamation damages.
A decision on the dismissal motion looms in March, with trial potentially set for 2027 if the case proceeds.
Spain cracks down on deepfakes
Spain’s cabinet has thrown down the gauntlet against AI-generated deepfakes, approving draft legislation Tuesday that sets strict consent rules and bolsters child protection online.
The law sets 16 as the minimum age for valid consent to use someone’s image, preventing minors’ photos shared innocently on social media from being weaponized by bad actors.
More sweeping: posting a family photo online no longer grants blanket permission to repurpose it in any context.
Commercial use of AI-generated images or voices without explicit consent becomes illegal, unless it’s clearly labeled as satirical content involving public figures.
The move reflects Europe’s broader awakening: the EU mandates that member states criminalize non-consensual sexual deepfakes by 2027.
Spain’s legislation still requires public consultation before parliament votes, but it signals serious intent to stay ahead of the AI deepfake curve.
French farmers protest Mercosur deal
Some 350 French tractors rumbled through Paris on Tuesday morning in a second rebellion within five days against the EU-Mercosur trade agreement set for Saturday’s signing in Paraguay.
The FNSEA farm union led convoys past iconic landmarks, the Arc de Triomphe, Champs-Elysées, and National Assembly, hammering home a message: South American beef and agricultural products threaten France’s livelihood and food security.
Farmers face a squeeze from rising fuel and fertilizer costs, tighter environmental rules, and price pressure from retailers that Mercosur deepens by flooding EU markets with cheaper imports produced under laxer standards.
Though President Macron opposes the deal, most EU member states backed it last week.
The European Parliament votes next week, and farmers plan another Strasbourg demonstration on January 20 to lobby MEPs directly.
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