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Europe Weekly Recap: Week Ending Saturday, May 30

Europe Weekly Recap: Week Ending Saturday, May 30

Europe weekly recap cover image for week ending May 30, 2026

Europe Weekly Recap: Week Ending Saturday, May 30

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Key PointsAbout This Summary iAn AI tool helped create this summary based on the text of the article. The Luna3 team has checked it for accuracy and revised as necessary. Read more about how we use AI in our publishing process.
  • IFX led Germany with a +17.81% move over the week
  • Covered 8 exchanges — 8 with notable gainers, 8 with notable decliners
  • Includes LSE, Xetra, Euronext Paris, Euronext Amsterdam, SIX, Borsa Italiana, BME, and OMX coverage

Session at a Glance

DAX led Europe higher on Infineon’s NVIDIA AI win as oil’s biggest weekly drop in two months pinned the FTSE flat.

FTSE 100 United Kingdom ▼ -0.06%
DAX 40 Germany ▲ +1.97%
CAC 40 France ▲ +1.27%
Euro STOXX 50 Eurozone ▲ +1.32%
IBEX 35 Spain ▲ +1.69%
FTSE MIB Italy ▲ +1.33%
AEX Netherlands ▲ +0.21%
SMI Switzerland ▲ +0.79%

European equities finished the week broadly higher on Iran ceasefire optimism and a sharp drop in crude, with the DAX (+1.97%) leading thanks to Infineon’s blowout gain after joining NVIDIA’s MGX 800V AI power-rack ecosystem. The CAC, MIB, IBEX and Euro STOXX 50 all gained roughly 1.3–1.7%, while Switzerland’s SMI lagged on healthcare drag.

The FTSE 100 finished essentially flat as the UK’s heavy oil and energy weighting offset gains elsewhere. BP plunged after the surprise ouster of chairman Albert Manifold on governance concerns, while TotalEnergies, Eni and Repsol all sank with crude — the biggest weekly oil drop in two months as Middle East de-escalation hopes deflated the geopolitical risk premium.

The through-line: lower oil and easing Iran tensions rotated capital out of European energy and into AI semis (Infineon, ASML), defense (Rolls-Royce on lingering US-Iran tensions) and consumer cyclicals (Stellantis, Inditex).

Here are the biggest movers across Europe’s major exchanges for the week ending Saturday, May 30, grouped by market — each figure is the stock’s move over the full trading week.

United Kingdom (LSE)

↑ RR +7.35%

Mid-cap · 1315 (local)

Why: Defense names led European gainers as lingering US-Iran tensions kept order-flow optimism alive for engine and aerospace suppliers despite the broader risk-on tone.

Pattern: Momentum continuation within the European defense cohort — a sector-rotation winner alongside Rheinmetall and BAE, not a single-name catalyst trade.

↓ BP -8.64%

Large-cap · 515 (local)

Why: BP plunged as the board ousted chairman Albert Manifold over governance and conduct concerns mid-week, compounded by the biggest weekly oil collapse in two months.

Pattern: Idiosyncratic governance shock layered onto a sector-wide oil drawdown — gap-down break with no immediate mean-reversion bid; weight on FTSE 100.

Germany (Xetra / DAX)

↑ IFX +17.81%

Mid-cap · 80.11 (local)

Why: Infineon joined NVIDIA’s MGX 800VDC AI factory ecosystem, positioning it as a key power-delivery supplier for next-gen GPU server racks using its Si, SiC and GaN portfolio.

Pattern: Catalyst-driven breakout — re-rating into the AI capex theme; classic momentum continuation that single-handedly pulled the DAX above peers this week.

↓ MUV2 -3.69%

Large-cap · 456.8 (local)

Why: No single catalyst — defensive reinsurance underperformed as capital rotated out of low-beta names into AI semis and cyclicals on Iran de-escalation optimism.

Pattern: Sector rotation drag — typical defensive underperformance in a risk-on week rather than a name-specific event.

France (Euronext Paris)

↑ RNO +8.13%

Mid-cap · 29.67 (local)

Why: No single catalyst — Renault rallied with the broader European auto cohort as falling oil prices and easing tariff anxiety boosted consumer cyclicals across the region.

Pattern: Sector rotation winner — momentum continuation in the European autos basket alongside Stellantis, riding the oil-down/cyclicals-up macro impulse.

↓ TTE -6.03%

Large-cap · 75.42 (local)

Why: TotalEnergies tracked the steepest weekly oil price drop in two months as Middle East de-escalation deflated the geopolitical risk premium baked into Brent.

Pattern: Macro catalyst — cohort move with BP, Eni and Repsol; cleaner mean-reversion candidate than BP since no governance overlay, but trend remains down.

Netherlands (Euronext AMS)

↑ ASML +3.40%

Mega-cap · 1391 (local)

Why: ASML rode the broader AI-capex enthusiasm fueled by Infineon’s NVIDIA MGX deal, reinforcing Europe’s leverage to the global semiconductor build-out.

Pattern: Momentum continuation within the AI-semis theme — modest gain reflects already-stretched positioning rather than fresh thesis change.

↓ PRX -2.47%

Large-cap · 38.62 (local)

Why: Prosus drifted lower on a quiet week with no major Tencent catalyst; Uber’s raised Delivery Hero stake also pressured the broader EU food-delivery complex Prosus is exposed to.

Pattern: Mild mean-reversion drift after recent outperformance — no high-conviction signal, more digestion than directional break.

Switzerland (SIX)

↑ CFR +5.25%

Large-cap · 165.5 (local)

Why: No single catalyst — Richemont firmed with the broader luxury cohort as a softer USD and risk-on tone supported high-end discretionary names like LVMH and Hermès.

Pattern: Sector rotation tailwind — luxury riding the same oil-down/cyclicals-up impulse that lifted European autos and Inditex.

↓ SREN -6.00%

Mid-cap · 118.2 (local)

Why: No single catalyst — Swiss Re slid as reinsurance defensives lagged a risk-on week and capital rotated into AI semis and cyclicals.

Pattern: Defensive cohort drag — same rotation that hit Munich Re; isolated to insurance/reinsurance rather than a Switzerland-specific story.

Italy (Borsa Italiana)

↑ STLAM +10.96%

Mid-cap · 6.998 (local)

Why: Stellantis recovered sharply after the prior week’s Investor Day selloff, helped by JLR and Dongfeng partnership headlines and easing oil-price pressure on consumer demand.

Pattern: Mean-reversion bounce off a deeply oversold base — classic post-Investor-Day digestion reversal, amplified by the auto-sector rotation tailwind.

↓ ENI -4.83%

Large-cap · 22.64 (local)

Why: Eni fell with the broader oil-major cohort as crude logged its biggest weekly drop in two months; the €55M Italian battery supply-chain announcement was not enough to offset the macro drag.

Pattern: Macro catalyst trade — cohort move with TotalEnergies, BP and Repsol; pure oil-beta name, no idiosyncratic break.

Spain (BME / Madrid)

↑ ITX +6.71%

Large-cap · 53.76 (local)

Why: No single catalyst — Inditex (Zara) rallied with the European consumer-cyclical cohort as lower oil eased input-cost concerns and risk-on flows supported premium discretionary.

Pattern: Sector rotation continuation — riding the oil-down/cyclicals-up impulse; a key contributor to the IBEX’s market-leading +1.69% week.

↓ REP -4.98%

Mid-cap · 21.75 (local)

Why: Repsol tracked crude lower as the Middle East risk premium deflated, completing a clean down-week for European integrated oil majors.

Pattern: Macro catalyst trade — part of the cross-border oil-major cohort (BP, TTE, ENI, REP) all selling off on the same Brent impulse.

Nordics (OMX / Stockholm)

↑ VOLV-B +3.29%

Large-cap · 323.4 (local)

Why: No single catalyst — Volvo Trucks gained with the broader European industrials and auto-related cohort as lower oil and easing tariff anxiety supported freight-cycle sentiment.

Pattern: Sector rotation winner — momentum continuation alongside European autos and capital-goods names; macro tailwind, not name-specific.

↓ ALFA -5.50%

Mid-cap · 518.8 (local)

Why: No single catalyst — Alfa Laval slid as capital-goods names trimmed gains; soft eurozone trade data (exports to US -38.8% YoY in March) weighed on industrial sentiment.

Pattern: Mild mean-reversion after a strong recent run — isolated within Swedish industrials rather than a coordinated cohort break.

Reading the Week

The exchange-by-exchange breakdown above surfaces both market-specific catalysts and cross-border themes. When multiple European exchanges move together, look for a macro driver (USD/EUR move, ECB/BoE policy, commodity price, EU regulatory shift). Isolated single-exchange moves tend to reflect local earnings, regulatory news, or sector rotation.

Read next: Europe Markets · What Is a P/E Ratio? · What Is a Dividend?

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