- IFX led Germany with a -8.26% move on 2026-07-08
- 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
Samsung-sparked chip rout hammers DAX as ASML and Infineon crater 7-8%, defensives hold firm.
| FTSE 100 | United Kingdom | ▲ +0.13% |
| DAX 40 | Germany | ▼ -1.37% |
| CAC 40 | France | ▼ -0.51% |
| Euro STOXX 50 | Eurozone | ▼ -1.22% |
| IBEX 35 | Spain | ▼ -0.22% |
| FTSE MIB | Italy | ▼ -0.95% |
| AEX | Netherlands | ▼ -0.32% |
| SMI | Switzerland | ▲ +0.41% |
A global semiconductor selloff triggered by Samsung’s disappointing quarterly results cascaded into European tech, dragging the DAX down 1.37% and the Euro STOXX 50 off 1.22%. ASML and Infineon led the losses, shedding 7-8% as investors questioned AI hardware valuations ahead of ASML’s July 15 earnings. ABB and Schneider Electric — both with data-centre exposure — sold off in sympathy.
The FTSE 100 (+0.13%) and SMI (+0.41%) bucked the trend, buoyed by defensive heavyweights and spirits names. Diageo and Pernod Ricard rallied sharply as traders rotated into beaten-down consumer staples. Meanwhile, De Beers’ deep diamond price cuts weighed on Anglo American, adding commodity-sector pressure in London.
The session’s split personality — tech crushed, defensives bid — suggests a classic risk-off rotation rather than broad macro deterioration.
Here are the standout movers across Europe’s major exchanges for the session of Wednesday, July 8, grouped by market.
United Kingdom (LSE)
↑ DGE +3.47%
Large-cap · 1564 (local)
Why: Diageo rallied as investors rotated into beaten-down spirits names; the stock remains heavily discounted after quarters of weak North American sales, drawing dip-buyers on a risk-off day.
Pattern: Mean-reversion bounce from oversold levels — fits a defensive rotation pattern when tech sells off hard; watch for follow-through above the 50-day moving average to confirm.
↓ AAL -4.60%
Mid-cap · 3610 (local)
Why: De Beers announced some of its deepest-ever diamond price cuts during its July sales cycle, pressuring Anglo American which is actively trying to sell the diamond unit amid a prolonged industry downturn.
Pattern: News-driven gap down on a structural headwind — De Beers overhang is a recurring drag; isolated to Anglo’s diamond exposure rather than broad mining weakness.
Germany (Xetra / DAX)
↑ SAP +2.74%
Mega-cap · 143.9 (local)
Why: SAP bucked the tech selloff after its CTO detailed a consumption-based AI monetization strategy via ‘AI Units’ and plans for 50 AI-powered assistants by Q3 — positioning it as an AI beneficiary, not a hardware-exposed name.
Pattern: Relative-strength divergence from broader tech tape — software-over-semis rotation; Q2 earnings on July 23 is the next catalyst to validate the AI revenue narrative.
↓ IFX -8.26%
Mid-cap · 70.83 (local)
Why: Samsung’s underwhelming quarterly results sparked a global chip selloff that hit European semiconductor names hardest; Infineon dropped 8% alongside ASML and STMicro as AI hardware valuations were questioned.
Pattern: Sector-wide momentum breakdown — part of a correlated semiconductor de-rating, not company-specific; watch the SOX index and Samsung follow-through for trend confirmation.
France (Euronext Paris)
↑ RI +5.48%
Mid-cap · 65.88 (local)
Why: Pernod Ricard rallied 5.5% as risk-off rotation favoured beaten-down spirits stocks; the name is deeply oversold after a 15% revenue decline in H1 2026, with an interim dividend ex-date on July 22 providing a near-term anchor.
Pattern: Mean-reversion snap higher from multi-year lows — mirrors Diageo’s move, suggesting a sector-wide spirits rotation rather than company-specific news.
↓ SU -3.72%
Mid-cap · 268 (local)
Why: Schneider Electric sold off amid the broader tech/industrial rout; analysts flagged the stock as potentially 35% overvalued following its $3.1 billion Cognite AI acquisition, adding valuation pressure.
Pattern: Data-centre/AI-adjacent names sold off with semis in a guilt-by-association trade; the Cognite deal overhang adds a company-specific premium-compression risk on top.
Netherlands (Euronext AMS)
↑ WKL +3.97%
Mid-cap · 60.18 (local)
Why: No clear catalyst — Wolters Kluwer likely benefited from defensive rotation as investors fled high-beta tech into quality compounders with recurring revenue and low cyclical exposure.
Pattern: Classic flight-to-quality bid in a tech-selloff session — Wolters Kluwer’s subscription-heavy model attracts capital when growth names de-rate; check if the move holds on a sector reversal.
↓ ASML -7.28%
Mega-cap · 1510 (local)
Why: ASML fell 7.3% as Samsung’s weak results triggered a global chip-equipment selloff; concerns about advanced bonding technology adoption and elevated valuations ahead of ASML’s July 15 earnings amplified selling.
Pattern: Sector-correlated breakdown alongside Infineon, STMicro, and Asian chip names — momentum continuation to the downside; the July 15 earnings report is a binary catalyst that could set the next leg.
Switzerland (SIX)
↑ GIVN +2.43%
Mid-cap · 3536 (local)
Why: No clear catalyst — Givaudan likely rose on defensive rotation as investors favoured Swiss quality names with stable earnings in a risk-off session; flavours-and-fragrances demand is non-cyclical.
Pattern: Defensive-bid pattern consistent with SMI outperformance (+0.41%) — Swiss blue chips acted as a safe haven during the semiconductor rout; move is sector-contextual, not stock-specific.
↓ ABBN -4.29%
Large-cap · 83.36 (local)
Why: ABB sold off 4.3% in sympathy with the broader tech and industrial automation selloff; its data-centre electrification and robotics exposure links it to the AI capex narrative that was under pressure.
Pattern: AI-adjacent industrial names traded as a proxy for semiconductor sentiment — ABB’s recent run to all-time highs near 89 CHF makes it vulnerable to profit-taking on any tech-tape wobble.
Italy (Borsa Italiana)
↑ ENI +0.56%
Large-cap · 20.5 (local)
Why: Eni edged higher after announcing a $225 million lithium investment in Chile and breaking ground on a lithium iron phosphate battery plant in Italy — positioning the company in energy transition beyond upstream oil.
Pattern: Modest green close in a red tape — energy transition catalysts provided a floor; the +0.56% move is noise-level but Eni’s diversification narrative is building incrementally.
↓ G -1.09%
Mid-cap · 42.47 (local)
Why: No clear catalyst — Assicurazioni Generali drifted lower with the broader Italian index; FTSE MIB fell 0.95% as financials gave back recent gains alongside rising Eurozone sovereign yields.
Pattern: Inline with index beta — European insurers tend to track rates and equity sentiment; the -1.09% move is within normal daily noise and not actionable in isolation.
Spain (BME / Madrid)
↑ TEF +1.67%
Mid-cap · 3.54 (local)
Why: Telefónica rose modestly, likely benefiting from telecom’s defensive qualities during the tech rout; AI-driven 5G network slicing narratives in the sector may have provided tailwind to European telcos broadly.
Pattern: Low-beta defensive bid — telecoms often catch a rotation bid on tech-down days; the +1.67% move is notable for an otherwise range-bound name but needs volume confirmation.
↓ AENA -0.66%
Mid-cap · 27.12 (local)
Why: No clear catalyst — Aena drifted marginally lower with the broader European market; the -0.66% decline is within normal daily range for this infrastructure concession stock.
Pattern: Noise-level move on a mildly red IBEX session (-0.22%) — no breakout or breakdown pattern; Aena’s travel-demand-linked cash flows make it relatively insensitive to the tech selloff.
Nordics (OMX / Stockholm)
↑ HM-B +1.40%
Mid-cap · 166.6 (local)
Why: No clear catalyst — H&M edged higher as consumer discretionary names caught a mild bid; the stock may be benefiting from positioning ahead of its next trading update as summer collections ramp.
Pattern: Modest bounce in a beaten-down name — H&M has underperformed peers and any upside feels like mean-reversion; the +1.40% is not yet a trend change without follow-through.
↓ ALFA -3.36%
Mid-cap · 563.6 (local)
Why: No clear catalyst — Alfa Laval sold off 3.4%, likely caught in the industrial-tech downdraft; its heat-exchanger and separation equipment business has data-centre cooling exposure that links it to the AI capex narrative.
Pattern: AI-industrial sympathy selling — mirrors ABB and Schneider patterns; Alfa Laval’s data-centre cooling thesis made it a momentum favourite, now vulnerable to the same de-rating.
Reading the Session
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.
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