- DAX led European losses at -1.31% as German industrials and tech sold off hard; FTSE MIB also dropped over 1%
- US session added pressure — S&P 500 fell 0.74%, Russell 2000 slid 1.37%, and tech names like Broadcom and CrowdStrike disappointed after hours
- Gold's 1.31% rally and rising VIX signal defensive positioning heading into Thursday's European open
The DAX just posted its worst session in weeks, and Wall Street offered no comfort overnight — European futures face a defensive open Thursday with gold catching a safe-haven bid and small caps getting hit hardest on both sides of the Atlantic.
Where Europe Closed Last Session
Wednesday’s session was uniformly red across the continent, led by Germany. The DAX 40 dropped 1.31% to 24,795.94, its sharpest single-day decline in recent weeks, as export-heavy industrials and semiconductor names bore the brunt of fading global risk appetite. The FTSE MIB fell 1.07% to 50,038, with Italian banks giving back gains from the prior week’s rally.
France’s CAC 40 lost 0.71% to 8,150.42, while the Euro STOXX 50 slipped 0.89% to 6,053.57 — both reflecting broad-based selling rather than any single-sector blowout. The SMI in Switzerland dropped 0.66% to 13,218.32, with defensive names like Nestlé and Roche failing to provide their usual cushion.
The FTSE 100 held up relatively better at -0.40% (10,332.30), helped by its commodity-heavy composition and weaker sterling providing a translation tailwind. Spain’s IBEX 35 fell 0.53%, the AEX shed 0.49%, and Copenhagen’s OMX 25 was the sole bright spot at +0.32% — likely driven by Novo Nordisk flows continuing to outweigh regional sentiment.
US Overnight Snapshot
Wall Street extended Europe’s weakness. The S&P 500 fell 0.74% to 7,550, the Nasdaq Composite dropped 0.89%, and the Russell 2000 took the hardest hit at -1.37% — a signal that risk appetite is contracting fastest in the most cyclically exposed names.
The VIX rose 1.84% to 16.1, still well below panic territory but drifting higher for a second straight session. Technology shares fell 1.00% (XLK) after Broadcom’s stock dropped despite reporting accelerating AI-chip growth — a reminder that expectations in the space are now so elevated that even good numbers get sold. CrowdStrike added to the cybersecurity earnings gloom. Financials lost 1.15%, which will weigh on European bank stocks at the open.
The lone bright spot was energy, with XLE gaining 1.29% — a divergence that may give Shell, BP, and TotalEnergies a partial offset when London and Paris open.
Commodity + FX Watch
Gold jumped 1.31% toward $4,490, its strongest move in over a week and a clear sign of defensive repositioning. That helps Swiss gold refiners and London-listed miners like Fresnillo.
WTI crude slipped 0.86% to $95.20, which cuts both ways for Europe — lower energy input costs for manufacturers, but a headwind for the FTSE 100’s outsized oil sector weighting. Copper fell 0.69%, reinforcing the growth-concern theme and adding pressure on mining names like Glencore and Rio Tinto.
On the FX side, AUD/USD dropped 0.51% to 0.714, reflecting broad dollar strength. USD/JPY was nearly flat at 160. A firmer dollar typically pressures euro-denominated exporters like ASML and Airbus, but gives a translation boost to companies earning in dollars — a mixed bag for the DAX.
What to Watch Today
- DAX rebound or follow-through? A 1.31% drop with US futures adding pressure sets up a gap-down risk at the Frankfurt open. Watch 24,600 on the DAX — a break below would mark a new short-term low and could accelerate selling in European tech names like SAP and Infineon.
- Labour market signals: US job openings hit a two-year high while hiring fell — a widening gap between vacancies and actual hiring that suggests employer caution. If Eurozone PMI or employment data echo this pattern, expect rate-cut expectations to shift.
- Energy vs. everything else: With XLE the only positive US sector overnight (+1.29%), European energy names (Shell, BP, TotalEnergies) may decouple from the broader index weakness. Track whether FTSE 100 outperforms the DAX again — it would confirm the defensive rotation into commodity-heavy UK equities.
- Gold as sentiment gauge: A second day of gold strength above $4,450 would confirm the risk-off tone is more than a one-session wobble. Watch whether Swiss franc strengthens in tandem — that pairing typically signals genuine European capital preservation flows.
Bottom Line
The setup for Thursday’s European session tilts defensive. Wednesday’s broad selloff across all major indices, combined with a weak US close and rising gold, points to a risk-off open — particularly for rate-sensitive and growth-exposed sectors in Germany and Italy. The FTSE 100’s relative resilience and energy sector strength offer a narrow pocket of opportunity, but the path of least resistance across the region is lower until buyers find a catalyst. Luna3 will be tracking whether the DAX holds the 24,600 level and whether gold’s bid has legs beyond a single session.
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