By Sara Sjolin, MarketWatch

LONDON (MarketWatch) -- European stock markets reversed in afternoon action on Tuesday and steered toward another day at multiyear highs, taking inspiration from the U.S. where markets climbed after top hedge-fund manager David Tepper said he remains bullish.

The Stoxx Europe 600 index added 0.2% to 305.01, on track to close at the highest level since June 2008.

Shares of Severn Trent PLC soared 12%, after the water-utility firm said it received a "very early stage" bid approach, although no proposal has been made.

Deutsche Post AG gained 3.6%, after the company reported a rise in first-quarter adjusted profit of more than 45%.

The broader European stock markets erased earlier losses after U.S. markets showed positive moves, after Tepper told CNBC that he's "definitely bullish" on stocks and that "every place is the place to be in stock markets around the world."

Most indexes in Europe traded in negative territory in the beginning of the session, as investors were looking at economic data in Germany. The ZEW economic sentiment indicator, a gauge of investor confidence, inched 0.1 point higher to 36.4 in May, but still well below the 40 print expected by analysts. The reading comes after the index slumped to 36.3 in April, stoking worries about Germany's economic performance and the country's ability to pull the rest of Europe of sluggish growth.

"Despite mostly positive economic data for the German economy, the ZEW Indicator remains at the level of the previous month. This may be due to the still poor economic situation in the euro zone, that is also reflected by the recent ECB interest-rate cut", said ZEW President Clemens Fuest, in the release.

German trade data and industrial-production figures released last week beat market expectations, fueling hopes the economy is picking up after a soft patch earlier in the year.

Meanwhile, industrial production in the euro zone climbed 1% in March compared with February, helped by a solid rise in energy production and durable consumer goods. Analysts expected a rise around 0.4%.

"The increase in IP over the past two months represents the first back-to-back gains in output since July/August last year. This set of data is, therefore, an encouraging sign of a possible stabilization in output," James Ashley, senior European economist at RBC Capital Markets, said in a note.

"However, we caution that the details of the report are a little more mixed than the headlines might suggest, with much of the strength on the month coming from the (erratic) energy sector," he added.

The report came a day ahead of the first estimate of economic growth in the euro zone for the first quarter, with most analysts expecting to see the region remaining in contraction.

The DAX 30 index rose 0.6% to 8,328.04 in Tuesday's trade, flirting with a fresh all-time high.

Banks were posting losses in Germany, with Commerzbank AG down 4.5%, after announcing a 2.5 billion euro ($3.25 billion) capital increase to repay German state aid and boost the bank's equity capital. The price of the new shares will be EUR4.5 a share, a 55% discount to Monday's closing price.

In France, European Aeronautic Defence & Space Co. rose 2.9%, after the firm kept its earnings guidance for 2013, but reiterated that the Airbus A350XWB long-range aircraft program remains "challenging."

The CAC 40 index put on 0.2% to 3,954.84.

The U.K.'s FTSE 100 index fell 0.6% to 6,670.48, poised for a ninth straight day of gains.

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