UPDATE 1-Springer, Daily Mail lead European stocks recovery

In this article:

(Corrects to say Madrid's IBEX in paragraph 8)

* Axel Springer, Daily Mail top performers on STOXX 600

* German yields rose first time in 4-days

* Healthcare, utilities, telecoms post slight declines

* Markets shut in Switzerland, Denmark, Sweden, among others

By Medha Singh

May 30 (Reuters) - Jumps for two of Europe's biggest newspaper publishers helped European stocks gain early on Thursday, recovering from a more than 3-month closing low a day earlier as U.S.-China trade concerns continued to weigh on stock markets.

Germany's Axel Springer SE shares jumped to the top of the pan-European STOXX 600 after it said it was in talks with private equity firm KKR about a potential investment in the company.

Britain's Daily Mail also gained over 8% after it reported a better-than-expected 19% rise in first-half adjusted pretax profit and reaffirmed its forecasts for the full year.

By 0825 GMT, the STOXX 600 was up 0.3%, its first gain in three days with the European media index leading gains with a more than 1% rise.

"It looks like a small bounce after weeks of negative sentiment," said Simona Gambarini, markets economist at Capital Economics in London.

"I'm not sure how long it will last" as concerns over Italy's budget dispute with the European Union still remains and trade situation also doesn't seem to be getting any better.

German government bond yields also rose for the first time in four days as stocks recovered, boosting interest-rate sensitive bank stocks.

Madrid's bank-heavy IBEX was the best performing country index while Britain's blue-chip FTSE 100 underperformed, weighed down by shares of energy utility National Grid and retailer Marks & Spencer, as both stocks traded ex-dividend.

The benchmark STOXX 600 has climbed about 10% so far this year, but a series of shocks related to the trade tensions between Beijing and Washington - and their potential impact on growth - have pulled European shares down around 5% this month.

Political risks in Europe are also growing, with the EU and Italy at odds over Rome's budget, snap elections in prospect in Greece and Austria and Britain's chaotic Brexit process, now set to include choosing a new Prime Minister this summer.

A Reuters poll showed European shares would move sideways until the end of 2019 and would make just modest gains thereafter.

Among smaller names, De La Rue Plc, commercial designer and printer of passports and banknotes tumbled a quarter in value after the company issued a profit warning and said its chief executive would step down.

Traditionally defensive stocks - healthcare, utilities and telecom - were the only ones in the red.

Volumes were lighter than usual as markets in Switzerland, Denmark, Sweden, Austria among others were shut on account of Ascension day. (Reporting by Medha Singh and Agamoni Ghosh in Bengaluru; Helen Reid in London, editing by Patrick Graham)

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