- RAND led Netherlands with a +6.40% move on 2026-07-14
- 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
Energy stocks surge on Strait of Hormuz closure while SK Hynix selloff hammers European chipmakers.
| FTSE 100 | United Kingdom | ▲ +0.01% |
| DAX 40 | Germany | ▲ +0.19% |
| CAC 40 | France | ▲ +0.31% |
| Euro STOXX 50 | Eurozone | ▲ +0.02% |
| IBEX 35 | Spain | ▼ -0.25% |
| FTSE MIB | Italy | ▲ +0.37% |
| AEX | Netherlands | ▲ +0.11% |
| SMI | Switzerland | ▲ +0.22% |
European markets opened under pressure after weekend US-Iran strikes and Trump’s reimposition of a Strait of Hormuz blockade, but energy names quickly took the lead as Brent crude jumped nearly 3% to $78.24. BP, Eni, and Repsol all rallied sharply, lifting the FTSE MIB (+0.37%) and CAC 40 (+0.31%) while the broader Euro STOXX 50 barely moved.
The semiconductor sector was the clear laggard. SK Hynix plunged over 15% in Seoul just days after its blockbuster Nasdaq debut, dragging ASML (-1.80%) and Infineon (-2.91%) lower in sympathy. The selloff reflected profit-taking and geopolitical anxiety rather than any AI demand crack.
The session split neatly along sector lines — oil-heavy indices outperformed while tech-weighted boards struggled. Spain’s IBEX (-0.25%) underperformed despite Repsol’s strength, weighed down by travel and infrastructure names like Aena as Middle East tensions clouded the tourism outlook.
Here are the standout movers across Europe’s major exchanges for the session of Tuesday, July 14, grouped by market.
United Kingdom (LSE)
↑ BP +4.63%
Large-cap · 505 (local)
Why: Brent crude surged nearly 3% after Iran declared the Strait of Hormuz closed following renewed US air strikes, lifting BP as a direct crude-price beneficiary ahead of its Q2 trading update.
Pattern: Macro-catalyst momentum trade — BP tracks Brent mechanically. The move is part of a sector-wide energy bid, not an isolated breakout. Watch for mean-reversion if Hormuz rhetoric de-escalates.
↓ BATS -1.82%
Mid-cap · 4381 (local)
Why: No clear catalyst — tobacco names drifted lower on a risk-on session that favoured cyclicals and energy over defensives. Broader sector rotation out of consumer staples.
Pattern: Defensive-sector underperformance on a day when capital rotated into oil and away from yield plays. Isolated drift, not a breakdown — check if it holds the 4,350 support zone.
Germany (Xetra / DAX)
↑ BAS +2.73%
Large-cap · 48.85 (local)
Why: BASF rallied as rising oil prices lifted the entire chemicals and materials complex — BASF’s upstream petrochemicals segment benefits from energy-linked pricing power ahead of Q2 results on July 30.
Pattern: Sector-rotation bid into materials alongside the oil rally. BASF has been range-bound near €47–50 — this push toward €49 tests the upper band. Momentum continuation if energy stays bid.
↓ IFX -2.91%
Mid-cap · 70.37 (local)
Why: SK Hynix plunged over 15% in Seoul days after its record Nasdaq IPO, dragging European chip names lower. Infineon fell in sympathy as the global semiconductor selloff rippled across markets.
Pattern: Contagion trade — Infineon’s drop mirrors the broader semi selloff, not a company-specific issue. If SK Hynix stabilises, IFX likely mean-reverts. Sector correlation is the dominant signal.
France (Euronext Paris)
↑ CAP +2.99%
Mid-cap · 91.62 (local)
Why: No clear catalyst in the last 36 hours — Capgemini bounced after recent weakness, possibly catching a bid from rotational flows into European IT services ahead of earnings season.
Pattern: Looks like a technical bounce off recent support. IT services have lagged semis — the divergence (CAP up while chip stocks fell) suggests investors distinguishing consulting from hardware risk.
↓ HO -0.99%
Large-cap · 221.1 (local)
Why: No clear catalyst — Thales drifted lower on a modest -1% move. Defence names gave back some recent gains as the session’s energy focus drew capital elsewhere.
Pattern: Minor pullback within a longer uptrend — Thales has been a geopolitical beneficiary for months. Sub-1% move is noise, not signal. Watch for dip-buying if Hormuz tensions persist.
Netherlands (Euronext AMS)
↑ RAND +6.40%
Mid-cap · 30.42 (local)
Why: Randstad surged +6.4% — likely positioning ahead of its Q2 earnings on July 22. The staffing firm has been in a short-term uptrend, and the outsized move suggests possible pre-earnings optimism or short covering.
Pattern: Pre-earnings momentum breakout — Randstad had gained in 6 of 10 prior sessions within a strong rising trend. The +6.4% move is unusually large for a staffing name and may attract mean-reversion sellers if earnings disappoint.
↓ ASML -1.80%
Mega-cap · 1541 (local)
Why: ASML fell 1.8% in sympathy with the global chip selloff triggered by SK Hynix’s 15% plunge in Seoul, one day ahead of ASML’s own Q2 earnings report on July 15.
Pattern: Pre-earnings dip inside a broader sector contagion trade. Analysts expect strong results — if ASML beats tomorrow, the selloff becomes a buy-the-dip setup. High-conviction event catalyst imminent.
Switzerland (SIX)
↑ SREN +1.51%
Mid-cap · 134.6 (local)
Why: Swiss Re edged up 1.5% — no specific headline driver. Reinsurers benefit from rising risk premiums, and Middle East tensions may be repricing catastrophe and political risk cover higher.
Pattern: Quiet grind higher consistent with the defensive quality bid in Swiss names. Not a breakout — more of a steady accumulation pattern. Reinsurance sector tends to outperform during geopolitical uncertainty.
↓ GIVN -0.38%
Mid-cap · 3420 (local)
Why: No clear catalyst — Givaudan slipped 0.38% on a quiet session. The specialty chemicals name trades at a premium valuation and tends to drift on low-news days.
Pattern: Negligible move, well within daily noise. Givaudan is a low-beta compounder — the -0.38% is not a signal. No pattern to trade here.
Italy (Borsa Italiana)
↑ ENI +3.88%
Large-cap · 21.56 (local)
Why: Eni rallied nearly 4% as Brent crude surged on the Strait of Hormuz closure, compounded by positive headlines on a BMW renewable diesel fleet deal and a major SLB OneSubsea umbilical contract win.
Pattern: Macro-catalyst momentum — Eni is tracking the oil complex higher. Company-specific contract news adds a fundamental layer. The FTSE MIB’s outperformance (+0.37%) is largely an Eni story today.
↓ RACE -0.92%
Large-cap · 328 (local)
Why: No clear catalyst — Ferrari dipped sub-1% as luxury-discretionary names saw mild profit-taking. Geopolitical anxiety may weigh on high-end consumer sentiment at the margin.
Pattern: Minor pullback in a premium-valuation name — Ferrari trades at extreme multiples and is sensitive to risk-off rotation. The -0.92% is noise unless it triggers a pattern of lower highs.
Spain (BME / Madrid)
↑ REP +4.07%
Mid-cap · 24.06 (local)
Why: Repsol surged over 4% as the integrated oil major rode the Brent crude rally driven by the Strait of Hormuz closure. Repsol’s upstream exposure makes it one of Europe’s highest-beta oil plays.
Pattern: Energy-sector momentum trade — Repsol has been trending higher from its 52-week low near €12.74. The +4% move extends a multi-month recovery. Watch crude for continuation signal.
↓ AENA -1.26%
Mid-cap · 26.6 (local)
Why: No clear catalyst — Aena dropped 1.26% as airport and travel-infrastructure names faced headwinds from escalating Middle East tensions, which cloud the summer tourism outlook for Mediterranean routes.
Pattern: Sector rotation away from travel infrastructure into energy — Aena’s loss is Repsol’s gain within the same index. Geopolitical risk repricing for travel-exposed names. Watch booking data for follow-through.
Nordics (OMX / Stockholm)
↑ ERIC-B +2.31%
Mid-cap · 112.8 (local)
Why: Ericsson gained 2.3% on positive sentiment around its AT&T drone-detection trial, which positions the company in the emerging 6G infrastructure narrative alongside its core 5G business.
Pattern: News-driven bid with a forward-looking catalyst. Ericsson has underperformed the broader tech sector — the 6G angle provides a re-rating hook. Watch for follow-through on volume.
↓ ASSA-B -1.25%
Mid-cap · 331.1 (local)
Why: No clear catalyst — Assa Abloy drifted lower by 1.25%. The lock and security company may be seeing mild rotation out of industrials on a session dominated by energy and geopolitics.
Pattern: Low-conviction drift in a steady compounder. Assa Abloy is a quality industrial — the move is within normal daily range. No breakout or breakdown pattern forming.
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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