European stocks closed mixed across the board on Monday.
The United Kingdom's FTSE 100 index rose 0.72 percent to close at 10,437.85 points. France's CAC 40 index dropped 0.25 percent to finish at 8,400.11 points. Germany's DAX index increased 0.62 percent to end the session at 25,139.69 points.
European stocks close mixed on Monday
Global supply chains are moving toward greater resilience, efficiency and vitality in the long run, even as geopolitical tensions pose systemic risks, according to a report released Monday at the fourth China International Supply Chain Expo in Beijing.
The report, titled Global Supply Chain Report 2026 and published by the China Council for the Promotion of International Trade (CCPIT), added six new supply chain mappings covering artificial intelligence, 3D printing, hydrogen energy, steel, corn and maritime shipping, bringing the total number of mapped supply chains to 23 since the first expo in 2023.
The CCPIT also released global supply chain resilience indices, which this year expanded to include dedicated indices for the United States and the European Union.
The overall index readings from 2018 to 2025 show that global supply chain promotion, connectivity, innovation and resilience indices all registered gains.
"All indices registered upward movements, pointing to a stable and improving global supply chain environment in which cooperative dynamics continue to outweigh frictions. The resilience index, however, rose at a considerably slower pace than the others, which indicates that the resilience of global supply chain remains fragile and is still in a stage of gradual recovery," said Zhao Ping, dean of the Academy of CCPIT.
Experts attending the expo said that building resilient global supply chains requires countries to deepen collaboration and freely share technology, rather than resorting to the protectionist and unilateral policies that disrupt international trade.
Global supply chains moving toward resilience, efficiency despite geopolitical risks: report