* FTSEurofirst 300 rises 1.8 percent
* Banks, miners gain; pharma shares fall
* Survey confirms euro zone businesses shrinking
By Brian Gorman
LONDON, Nov 21 (Reuters) - European shares rose in morning
trade on Friday, led by banks and commodity stocks, recovering a
part of the previous day's hefty losses and tracking overnight
gains in Asia as banks climbed.
At 1003 GMT, the pan-European FTSEurofirst 300 index
<> was 1.8 percent higher at 794.80 points. But the index
has lost more than 47 percent this year, hammered by a credit
crisis and economic slowdown. The index fell 3.8 percent to its
lowest close in five-and-a-half years on Thursday.
Some analysts said the worst may be over.
"The darkest hour is just before dawn," said Justin Urquhart
Stewart, director at Seven Investment Management.
"Actions are being taken which are encouraging -- interest
rates are being cut, the monetary system is being repaired, with
LIBOR easing; banks are being supported.
"The actions being taken are the key difference between the
1930s and now," Urquhart Stewart said.
Among banks, Royal Bank of Scotland <RBS.L> added 4.4
percent, UBS <UBSN.VX> gained 2.7 percent and Credit Agricole
<CAGR.PA> put on 2.6 percent.
Bank of Ireland <BKIR.L> was up 13.9 percent. A consortium
is planning a 2.5 billion-euro to 3 billion-euro ($3.13-3.76
billion) bid for a stake in Bank of Ireland <BKIR.I> amid
government plans for consolidation in the sector, the Irish
Independent newspaper said on Friday.
Bank of Ireland was not immediately available for comment.
Barclays <BARC.L> rose 4.2 percent after one of the British
bank's top investors said it would back its fundraising plan
even though it does not like the structure of the controversial
deal.
Legal & General Investment Management (LGIM), part of
insurer Legal & General Plc <LGEN.L>, said late on Thursday it
would vote in favour of Barclays' plan to raise 7 billion pounds
($10.4 billion), including over 5 billion from Middle East
investors. []
Banks had been under pressure in recent days, taking their
cue from the U.S. market, where Citigroup <C.N> faces a crisis
of confidence as investors question its survival prospects.
Citi shares fell more than 26 percent to a nearly 14-year
low on Thursday despite a vote of confidence from the banking
giant's largest individual investor, Saudi Prince Alwaleed bin
Talal, who said he would raise his stake to 5 percent from less
than 4 percent.
The second-largest U.S. bank by assets has been reeling on
concerns that mounting losses from credit cards, mortgages and
toxic debt could overwhelm its efforts to slash costs and
increase deposits. The bank is considering sales of assets, or
even the whole company, said the Wall Street Journal.
Its Frankfurt-listed shares <TRV.F> rose 6 percent on
Friday.
MINERS GAIN
Miners were higher as gold and platinum prices rose. Anglo
American <AAL.L>, Antofagasta <ANTO.L>, BHP Billiton <BLT.L>,
Eurasian Natural Resources Corp. <ENRC.L>, Kazakhmys <KAZ.L>,
Lonmin <LMI.L>, Rio Tinto <RIO.L>, Vedanta Resources <VED.L> and
Xstrata <XTA.L> all rose between 5.5 percent and 9.8 percent.
Oils gained, as crude prices <CLc1> enjoyed a slight
rebound, though they were still below $50 a barrel.
Total <TOTF.PA>, BP <BP.L>, Royal Dutch Shell <RDSa.L>,
Statoil <STL.OL> and BG <BG.L> gained between 1.1 percent and 6
percent.
Pharmaceutical companies, hurt less than the wider market in
recent days due to their defensive qualities, were mostly lower.
GlaxoSmithKline <GSK.L> and Novartis <NOVN.VX> were down 2.2 and
1.6 percent respectively.
Across Europe, Britain's FTSE 100 <>, Germany's DAX
<> and France's CAC-40 <> were up 1 percent to 1.1
percent.
But economic news continued to confirm a pattern of
slowdown. Euro zone services and manufacturing business sank
much deeper and faster than expected in November to record lows
as consumer and business demand collapsed at home and abroad, a
key survey showed on Friday.
The Markit Eurozone Purchasing Managers Index for services
companies ranging from banks to restaurants fell to 43.3 in
November from 45.8 the previous month, the lowest in the
survey's 10-year history, and well below the 50.0 mark that
divides growth from contraction.
Japan's Nikkei <> rose 2.7 percent, buoyed by
short-covering on hopes of Wall Street gains.
Major U.S. stock indexes slid between 5.1 percent and 6.7
percent on Thursday as economic concerns sent investors fleeing
from risk.
(Additional reporting by Rebekah Curtis; Editing by Sharon
Lindores)