UK and European markets are taking stock after initial falls following Donald Trump's election victory.
The FTSE 100 index fell 1.4% in early trading before recovering to trade flat at 6,838 points.
Other major European stock markets edged lower, with money flowing into safe haven stocks, gold and currencies including the yen.
Traders had expected Hillary Clinton to beat Mr Trump to become the next US president.
France's Cac index and Germany's Dax are each down about 1% after heavier falls at the start of trading.
Some analysts have likened the shock of a Trump victory to the Brexit result earlier this year.
However, neither markets nor currencies have swung as wildly as they did after June's EU referendum.
The biggest winners on the FTSE 100 were pharmaceutical firms, gold and mining companies, while banks and retailers were among the losers.
US stock futures fell sharply overnight as Mr Trump's lead became clear, although the Dow Jones index is now expected to lose 2% - about 400 points when it reopens - compared to earlier predictions of a 4% fall.
Many Asian markets saw losses narrow towards the end of Wednesday trading. Japan's Nikkei 225 closed down by 5.4%, but the Hang Seng in Hong Kong and the Shanghai Composite - which closed later - lost 2.2% and 0.6% respectively.




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Analysis: Dominic O'Connell, Today business presenter

Overnight, the FTSE 100 futures contract indicated the British market would slump - down 4%, was the call.
In the end, the indicators were wrong. It was a far cry from the sharp fall the day after the Brexit vote, and mild after the heavy sell-off on Asian markets overnight.
Why are traders so sanguine? Part of the explanation may be an attempt to second-guess what happened after the European referendum.
Then, markets recovered all their lost ground in six weeks, and the FTSE 100 eventually went to an all time-high. Once bitten, twice shy.
Investors were also trying to pick winners from the Trump victory. Gold and other commodities were up, while shares that might suffer from trade wars were down.
In the end, though, the most likely explanation for the market's relative calm is confusion.
The markets know as little about a Trump presidency as anyone else, and trying to seek a safe haven when no-one quite knows the direction of the world's largest economy is tricky. Better to sit on your hands and see what happens.

Kathleen Brooks, an analyst at City Index, said markets were calming down after the initial shock. "This suggests that a win for President Trump is not yet America's Brexit moment. US Treasuries have reversed earlier gains, and yields are rising."
The pound has strengthened against the dollar, rising 0.3% to go back above $1.24, while the euro is 0.4% higher against the US currency.
The Japanese yen, viewed as a safe haven currency in situations of international volatility, strengthened by 2% against the dollar.
Gold initially jumped 5% - the biggest one-day rise since after the UK's Brexit vote - before falling back to a 2% gain at $1,300.80 an ounce.




US investor Jim Rogers - who bet against the US stock market, believing Donald Trump would win - said US assets were taking a hit because of concerns about Mr Trump 's foreign policy.
"Just about everything will go down," he told the BBC's Today programme. "If he wins, it's going to rattle people because he talks about trade wars."
Meanwhile, concerns about the impact of a Trump presidency on the Mexican economy saw its currency, the peso, fall more than 13% overnight against the dollar to its lowest level in two decades.
Mexico is expected to suffer if Mr Trump is elected, because of his pledges to build a wall along the US border with the country and renegotiate the two nations' trade agreement.

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