By Sara Sjolin, MarketWatch

LONDON (MarketWatch) -- European stock markets were mixed Wednesday, after posting solid gains the prior day, with investors staying cautious ahead of a deluge of data from both the U.S. and Europe.

The Stoxx Europe 600 index fell 0.1% to 289.60, retreating from a 1.1% rally on Tuesday.

"This week we have the Italian election over the weekend and I think there's 30%-40% change of a market unfriendly outcome. That would be bad for the euro and bad for Italian bonds. I think it would be very wise to keep risk low over the weekend," said Nick Beecroft, senior market analyst at Saxo Capital Markets in London.

Shares of Royal KPN NV slumped 8.1%, as the Dutch telecom firm said its largest shareholder, Mexico's America Movil, (AMX) has agreed to back a planned capital increase of four billion euros ($5.37 billion).

Shares of Akzo Nobel NV shaved off 1%. The Dutch paints and coatings firm said it outlined new financial targets for 2015 after posting a net loss for the fourth quarter.

For the broader European stock market, investors awaited a raft of economic releases. Euro-zone-consumer-confidence figures, U.S. housing starts and U.S. wholesale-price data were all on tap.

U.S. stock futures pointed to a slightly higher open on Wall Street.

After the European market close, minutes from the January Federal Reserve meeting were also due.

"The December minutes were surprising as they revealed that a majority of the [policy-making Federal Open Market Committee] wanted to scale back asset purchases this year and potentially end the purchase program before year-end," analysts at Danske Bank said in a note. "The January minutes will therefore be scrutinized for new information about the timing of an exit."

In the U.K., the FTSE 100 index jumped above the 6,400 level for the first time since January 2008, up 0.3%, after members at the Bank of England appeared more willing to launch more quantitative easing. Minutes from the bank's February policy meeting showed three out of nine members called for a 25 billion pound ($38.6 billion) increase in the asset-purchase program, up from just one member in January.

"The U.K. market being higher is surely due to the minutes, because they were extremely dovish. You had three members voting for GBP25 billion more quantitative easing and they repeated the willingness to look through higher inflation for the next couple of years," said Beecroft from Saxo Capital Markets.

"That means there could be more cheap money driving markets," he added.

Shares of heavyweight miner BHP Billiton PLC (BHP) fell 2.6%, as the firm reported a 58% drop in half-year profit and said Chief Executive Marius Kloppers will retire. .

Among other country-specific indexes in Europe, France's CAC 40 index lost 0.2% to 3,729.89, even as Société Générale SA gained 0.5% on the back of a broker upgrade. HSBC lifted the bank to overweight from neutral.

Shares of Lafarge SA rallied 6.9%, after the cement maker confirmed its plans to lower its debt level this year. Additionally, the firm reported a 27% drop in full-year profit.

Cement makers were also on the rise in Germany, with shares of HeidelbergCement AG up 2.8%.

Deutsche Lufthansa AG on the other hand, slid 4.5%. The airline said late Tuesday it swung to a net profit in 2012, but that it planned to suspend dividends in 2013 to help retain cash. .

Germany's DAX 30 index gained 0.2% to 7,767.58.

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