* European shares plummet 3 pct at open * Cyclical sectors lead plunge * But market partially recovers by 0900 GMT Feb 6 (Reuters) - Welcome to the home for real time coverage of European equity markets brought to you by Reuters stocks reporters and anchored today by Danilo Masoni. Reach him on Messenger to share your thoughts on market moves: danilo.masoni.thomsonreuters.com@reuters.net VIEWS FROM THE STREET: MELT-UP TO MELT-DOWN (0858 GMT) Big brokers are getting their head around the sell-off hitting world markets; here are a few of their views. "We have not sensed panic among equity investors, but nervousness has been building for the past few weeks," writes RBC, saying a pullback may have been overdue. Yet "For now, we are buyers on the dip," the Canadian bank's strategists say, adding their constructive view on equities was not dependent on further multiple expansion. "Economic pessimism is not behind the selloff," write strategists at Bespoke Investment Group. Pointing to the recent surge in EPS estimates, they argue "this is about fair value coming down rather than earnings... that makes spillover effects (higher implied vol, implications for rates) much less of a concern; asset prices can only get so disjointed from recent levels before a bottom is found and equilibrium restored." JP Morgan's Marko Kolanovic points out a "massive divergence" between strong fundamentals and equity price action. "Rapid sell-offs, such as the one today, can also be followed by market bounce backs as liquidity gets exhausted by programmatic selling," he wrote. Indeed, U.S. stocks futures have just turned higher and are trading up 0.5 to 1.1 percent, indicating a potential relief bounce on Wall Street. (Helen Reid) ***** EUROPE AVOIDS WORST OF U.S. SHARE FALLS FOR NOW (0823) The plunge in U.S. stocks came mostly late in the day after Europe closed but right now the Stoxx Europe 600 index is down 2.6 percent, less than the Dow's 4.6 percent slump. A buy signal? Unicredit strategists say the increased volatility in technology stocks - which have been instrumental to the surge higher in U.S. equities - means euro zone equity indices, with their higher weighting of traditional industrial stocks and financials, "should finally start to significantly outperform the U.S. stock market". They caution however that the "increasingly late-cycle environment", especially in the U.S., makes euro zone equities vulnerable to short-term shifts in sentiment. (Tom Pfeiffer) ***** OPENING SNAPSHOT: SEA OF RED IN EUROPEAN STOCKS (0812) Europe's main benchmarks are down 2.7 to 2.9 percent with the FTSE down 2.5 percent. They are, however, holding up relatively well compared to the more than 4 percent slumps on Wall Street yesterday. The STOXX 600 is set for its worst day since the Brexit vote and its worst seven-day fall in two years. Cyclical sectors are leading the plunge, with oil & gas, autos, and basic resources stocks the worst-performing. Financials, the stars of the New Year rally, are the biggest weight on the STOXX with Credit Suisse among the worst fallers, down 5 percent. Some $4 trillion has been wiped off global equities in this sell-off, and counting: UNWIND OF SHORT VOLATILITY PLAYS SHAKES MARKET (0739 GMT) With the VIX shooting up in U.S. trading, its biggest one-day jump in more than two years, investors are rushing to unwind big positions in ETF products shorting the VIX and take out options protecting themselves against a further slide in stocks. Our colleagues in New York reported overall VIX options volume hit 3.6 million contracts, or about three times the daily average. The VelocityShares Inverse VIX short-term ETN sank 86 percent and the ProShares Short VIX short-term futures ETF fell nearly 80 percent. Investors said the inverse ETF products may be liquidated after suffering these heavy losses. Credit Suisse, the issuer of the VelocityShares inverse ETF, is seen down as much as 10 percent at the open, according to a trader. The UBS VelocityShares VSTOXX inverse ETF, which shorts the European volatility gauge, plunged 21 percent yesterday in New York. (Helen Reid) ***** "WE'RE IN UNCHARTED WATERS" (0729 GMT) As we've seen European stock futures are pointing to heavy losses at the open and investors are trying to make sense about what could come next, as inflation worries have pushed Wall Street's volatility index to its highest since August 2015. "Price action is clearly driven by technical factors, tied to a brutal awakening of stock volatility," said Alessandro Balsotti, head of asset management at JCI Capital Ltd. "We are undoubtedly in uncharted waters," he adds. "The first instinct as an asset allocator is to take advantage of this dip to add equity exposure. Also to exploit the decline in yields to further reduce duration... Ultimately I think the robust economic phase will be able to withstand the bloodshed on volatility. The real danger for 2018 remains that the transition from a deflationary mentality to an inflationary one will... not be simple at all for the market and investors," he said. (Danilo Masoni) ***** EUROPEAN STOCK FUTURES PLUMMET (0710 GMT) European equity index futures have opened down sharply confirming earlier indications from financial spreadbetters for declines of around 4 percent. Here's your snapshot: (Danilo Masoni) ***** EARLY MORNING EUROPEAN HEADLINE ROUND-UP (0644 GMT) Corporate news is unlikely to have much impact today as investors prepare for broad sell-off at the open that could see top European stock benchmarks fall as much as 5 percent. Anyway here are the main headlines we've seen this morning: BNP Paribas Q4 profits dip, yet bank signals more confidence on 2020 targets EXCLUSIVE-British wind project draws investment heavyweights - sources Bayer offers to sell businesses to win EU approval for Monsanto deal Swedbank Q4 net profit tops forecast Activist Elliott steps up calls for BHP to scrap dual listing Apple supplier AMS's Q4 profit soars thanks to sensor technology Banks in Britain and U.S. ban Bitcoin buying with credit cards Infrastructure fund GIP offers 1.9 bln euros to buy railway group Italo Terra Firma kicks off sale of Italian solar assets - sources MEDIA-Accor nears sale of stake in real estate arm- FT BRIEF-Safran To Hold 79.74 Percent Of Zodiac Following Tender Offer - AMF Brazil's EMS and India's Torrent Pharma vying for Sanofi's generic drugs -sources Belgian business urges Lufthansa not to merge Brussels Airlines with Eurowings Lockheed, Rheinmetall team up to bid for German helicopter order Intesa Sanpaolo releases results, business plan; announces full conversion of saving shares (Danilo Masoni) ***** MORNING CALL: EUROPEAN SHARES SEEN PLUMMETING AT THE OPEN (0614 GMT) Good morning and welcome to Live Markets. European shares are set to fall sharply at the open after a rout in global equities deepened in Asia on Tuesday and Wall Street suffered its biggest decline since 2011 as inflation worries gripped financial markets in a vicious sell-off. "The weakness has continued in Asia with the Nikkei225 bearing the brunt with its worst fall since 1990, and is set to spill over once again today into European trading with another sharply lower open for European stocks, as nervous investors continue to bail out," said Michael Hewson, Chief Market Analyst at CMC Markets UK. Here are your opening calls: FTSE100 is expected to open 275 points lower at 7,060 -3.7% DAX is expected to open 682 points lower at 12,005 -5.3% CAC40 is expected to open 260 points lower at 5,025 -4.9% (Danilo Masoni) ***** (Reporting by Danilo Masoni, Helen Reid, Kit Rees and Julien Ponthus)