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Europe Top Movers: Thursday, June 4

Europe Top Movers: Thursday, June 4

Europe top movers cover image for June 04, 2026

Europe Top Movers: Thursday, June 4

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  • PRX led Netherlands with a -5.51% move on 2026-06-04
  • 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 leads Europe lower as USTR proposes fresh 10% tariffs on 60 economies including the EU.

FTSE 100 United Kingdom ▼ -0.40%
DAX 40 Germany ▼ -1.31%
CAC 40 France ▼ -0.71%
Euro STOXX 50 Eurozone ▼ -0.89%
IBEX 35 Spain ▼ -0.53%
FTSE MIB Italy ▼ -1.07%
AEX Netherlands ▼ -0.49%
SMI Switzerland ▼ -0.66%

European equities sold off after the USTR announced proposed Section 301 tariffs of 10–12.5% on imports from 60 economies, with the EU facing a 10% levy tied to forced-labor trade practices. Germany’s export-heavy DAX bore the brunt at −1.31%, dragging mega-cap SAP down over 4% as analysts continued resetting cloud growth expectations. Italy’s MIB fell 1.07%, led by Stellantis — already guiding €1.6B in tariff costs — sinking another 4%.

Energy was the clear outlier. Rising oil prices on West Asia/Iran tensions lifted Repsol, ENI, and RWE against the red tape. London’s FTSE 100 outperformed at just −0.40%, cushioned by its commodity-heavy composition. Defensive names like Tesco and Novartis also held firm, with Tesco buoyed by its ongoing £750M buyback programme.

A visible split emerged: tariff-exposed sectors (autos, luxury, tech) led the downside, while energy and consumer staples absorbed the shock. Kering’s 4% drop carried an ex-dividend mechanical component but also reflected persistent luxury softness. Prosus tumbled 5.5% on Delivery Hero stake uncertainty compounded by Tencent/China tariff exposure.

Here are the standout movers across Europe’s major exchanges for the session of Thursday, June 4, grouped by market.

United Kingdom (LSE)

↑ TSCO +3.04%

Mid-cap · 443.6 (local)

Why: Tesco is executing a £750M share buyback (launched April, ~£231M deployed so far) and delivered solid full-year results — defensive staples also attracted flows in a risk-off session.

Pattern: Momentum continuation with buyback floor — consistent bid under the stock compresses downside and attracts defensive rotation on tariff-driven risk-off days.

↓ RIO -2.84%

Large-cap · 8072 (local)

Why: Miners tracked lower on renewed US-China tariff fears after the USTR proposed 12.5% levies on Chinese imports, pressuring the commodity demand outlook and iron ore sentiment.

Pattern: Sector rotation out of cyclicals — large-cap miners tend to correlate with China growth expectations, and fresh tariff escalation compresses forward demand assumptions.

Germany (Xetra / DAX)

↑ RWE +3.66%

Mid-cap · 57.14 (local)

Why: Rising European energy prices on West Asia/Iran geopolitical tensions lifted energy names broadly; RWE’s strong 2026 EBITDA trajectory and utility defensiveness added to the bid.

Pattern: Momentum continuation within the energy sector rally — RWE has re-rated from the low €20s to high €50s in 2026, and geopolitical risk premium keeps the trend intact.

↓ SAP -4.25%

Mega-cap · 155.9 (local)

Why: Ongoing analyst resets on SAP’s cloud growth pace — TD Cowen recently cut its price target to $230 — combined with broad European tech selling on the new tariff announcement.

Pattern: Mean-reversion pressure after a strong 2025 run — the January cloud backlog miss is still being digested, and each risk-off day invites fresh de-rating in mega-cap tech.

France (Euronext Paris)

↑ AI +1.90%

Large-cap · 179.9 (local)

Why: Air Liquide announced a $233M investment in South Korea to supply SK Hynix’s AI chip production, reinforcing its positioning in the semiconductor supply chain buildout.

Pattern: Structural growth catalyst — capex commitments to the AI/semiconductor supply chain signal durable revenue visibility and attract buyers even in broad risk-off sessions.

↓ KER -4.07%

Large-cap · 244.1 (local)

Why: Kering went ex-dividend June 2 (€1.75/share final payment), contributing ~0.7% of the drop mechanically; the remaining decline reflects persistent luxury sector softness and tariff-driven risk-off.

Pattern: Downtrend continuation — Kering has shed over 12% in the prior week and the ex-dividend drop compounds an already weak technical picture in European luxury names.

Netherlands (Euronext AMS)

↑ ASML +1.60%

Mega-cap · 1485 (local)

Why: JP Morgan raised ASML estimates after the chipmaker signalled it can supply far more EUV tools than previously guided, providing a positive offset to the broader European tech selloff.

Pattern: Relative strength in a down tape — ASML gaining while SAP and the DAX fall signals stock-specific institutional accumulation on the upgraded capacity narrative.

↓ PRX -5.51%

Large-cap · 40.25 (local)

Why: Prosus tumbled on Delivery Hero stake sale uncertainty (EU extended deadline to October) and Tencent exposure — China faces the highest 12.5% tariff tier in the new USTR proposal.

Pattern: Macro catalyst selloff — Prosus’s ~80% NAV tied to Tencent makes it a leveraged proxy for China trade risk, and the forced Delivery Hero divestiture adds idiosyncratic overhang.

Switzerland (SIX)

↑ NOVN +0.46%

Mega-cap · 113.5 (local)

Why: Novartis edged higher as pharma defensives attracted rotation on the tariff-driven risk-off day; no company-specific catalyst, but broader biotech news flow (Alzheimer’s delivery innovation) kept sentiment constructive.

Pattern: Defensive rotation — mega-cap Swiss pharma typically outperforms in risk-off sessions as investors shelter in low-beta, high-dividend-yield names.

↓ LONN -1.51%

Mid-cap · 488.9 (local)

Why: No clear catalyst — Lonza drifted lower with the broader European market selloff; the stock likely tracked general risk-off sentiment rather than any company-specific news.

Pattern: Mild mean-reversion within a range — the -1.5% move is within normal daily noise for a mid-cap name and likely reflects portfolio-level de-risking rather than a directional signal.

Italy (Borsa Italiana)

↑ ENI +1.34%

Large-cap · 23.45 (local)

Why: Rising oil prices on West Asia/Iran tensions lifted European energy majors; ENI also benefits from its Baleine oil expansion and strategic battery diversification narrative.

Pattern: Sector tailwind — energy was the standout positive sector across Europe this session, and ENI’s dual oil-plus-transition story attracts both value and ESG-adjacent flows.

↓ STLAM -4.04%

Mid-cap · 6.361 (local)

Why: European autos were the worst-hit sector on fresh US tariff fears — Stellantis already guides €1.6B in 2026 tariff costs, and its heavy US-EU cross-border manufacturing amplifies exposure.

Pattern: Downtrend acceleration — Stellantis is down ~39% in 2026 with multiple analyst target cuts; each tariff escalation headline compresses the already-thin margin recovery thesis.

Spain (BME / Madrid)

↑ REP +2.73%

Mid-cap · 23.32 (local)

Why: Repsol rallied on rising oil prices driven by West Asia tensions; JPMorgan recently double-upgraded the stock, adding fundamental conviction to the commodity-led bid.

Pattern: Momentum continuation backed by analyst upgrade — the JPMorgan double-upgrade provides a catalyst layer on top of the energy sector’s geopolitical tailwind.

↓ BBVA -2.25%

Large-cap · 19.53 (local)

Why: BBVA fell after Morgan Stanley cut its price target to €20; tariff uncertainty depresses growth expectations and compresses rate outlook for European bank loan books.

Pattern: Sector rotation out of financials — European banks are sensitive to macro growth downgrades, and fresh tariff headlines directly challenge the earnings recovery narrative.

Nordics (OMX / Stockholm)

↑ ALFA +3.18%

Mid-cap · 539.2 (local)

Why: Alfa Laval rose on investor re-rating of its steady industrial earnings profile — the company’s heat transfer and fluid handling divisions benefit from energy transition capex cycles.

Pattern: Defensive industrial momentum — mid-cap Nordic industrials with energy-transition exposure tend to attract bids when tariff fears hit consumer-facing cyclicals harder.

↓ INVE-B -0.86%

Mid-cap · 379.3 (local)

Why: No clear catalyst — Investor AB drifted lower with the broader European market; as a holding company its NAV tracks the Swedish equity market, which softened on tariff concerns.

Pattern: Index-tracking drift — holding companies like Investor AB move as a portfolio proxy; the -0.86% is modest relative to its underlying equity basket’s tariff sensitivity.

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.

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

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