Here’s the Europe Daily Preview post for Friday, June 5, 2026:
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- European indices closed Thursday broadly higher, led by CAC 40 +1.15% and SMI +0.93%, extending a risk-on streak across the continent
- US overnight session showed sharp rotation out of tech (XLK -1.56%) into financials (XLF +2.59%) and small caps (Russell 2000 +1.51%) — European banks may benefit while ASML and SAP face pressure
- Copper dropped 1.45% overnight, signaling caution on industrial demand that could weigh on mining-heavy FTSE 100 and materials names at the open
Europe closed Thursday with its strongest broad-based rally in over a week, but the overnight US session delivered a blunt message — investors are rotating hard out of tech and into financials and small caps, and that split will shape how London, Frankfurt, and Paris trade into the weekend.
Where Europe Closed Last Session
Paris led the charge. The CAC 40 gained 1.15% to 8,244.29, its best session this week, with broad strength across luxury and industrials. Switzerland’s SMI rose 0.93% to 13,341.27, supported by defensive heavyweights Nestlé and Roche. The Euro STOXX 50 added 0.82% to 6,103.33, confirming the move was eurozone-wide rather than concentrated in a single market.
Germany’s DAX 40 climbed 0.60% to 24,944.95, flirting again with the 25,000 level that has capped rallies twice this quarter. Spain’s IBEX 35 rose 0.55% to 18,276.00, keeping its year-to-date outperformance intact on the back of tourism and banking strength.
The UK underperformed slightly. The FTSE 100 added just 0.27% to 10,360.30, held back by commodity-linked miners and energy names that didn’t participate in the continental rally. Italy’s FTSE MIB and the Dutch AEX both matched that 0.27% pace. The outlier was Copenhagen — the OMX C25 dropped 1.01% to 1,734.74, dragged lower by Novo Nordisk weakness that continues to weigh on the index.
US Overnight Snapshot
The headline numbers look calm — S&P 500 up 0.41% to 7,580, VIX down 4.11% to 15.4 — but underneath, the rotation was violent. Financials surged 2.59% (XLF), the biggest single-day sector move in weeks, while Technology dropped 1.56% (XLK). The Russell 2000 jumped 1.51%, confirming money was flowing down the market-cap spectrum and out of mega-cap tech.
The Nasdaq Composite slipped 0.09% even as the broader market rallied. Jensen Huang’s call that Marvell could become a $1 trillion chip company sparked excitement in select semiconductor names but wasn’t enough to lift the broader tech complex. For Europe, this matters directly: ASML, SAP, and Infineon will likely face selling pressure at the open, while European banks — BNP Paribas, Deutsche Bank, Barclays — could catch the tailwind from the US financials bid.
Commodity + FX Watch
Copper fell 1.45% overnight, the sharpest drop this week, which signals fading confidence in near-term industrial demand. That’s a direct headwind for FTSE 100 miners like Glencore, Anglo American, and Rio Tinto. WTI crude edged down 0.21% to $92.80 — not enough to move Shell or BP materially, but the direction keeps energy names on the defensive. Gold held steady at $4,480, up 0.10%, offering no fresh signal.
On FX, the dollar was largely flat — USD/JPY unchanged at 160, AUD/USD off just 0.10%. The lack of movement in EUR/USD removes a variable for eurozone exporters today. If anything, the steady euro means Thursday’s CAC rally was driven by genuine equity demand rather than currency tailwinds — a healthier signal for follow-through.
What to Watch Today
- European bank follow-through: US financials surged 2.59% overnight. Watch whether BNP Paribas, Société Générale, UniCredit, and Barclays open with momentum or fade the move — this will tell you if the rotation is crossing the Atlantic or staying domestic.
- DAX 25,000 test: The index closed at 24,945 — just 55 points from a round number that has acted as resistance. A clean break on volume would be technically significant heading into next week.
- Tech drag on AEX and DAX: With US tech down 1.56%, ASML (AEX heavyweight) and SAP (DAX heavyweight) will likely open lower. The question is whether the rest of the index can absorb it, as happened Thursday, or whether tech selling drags the broader tape.
- Copenhagen recovery or further weakness: The OMX C25’s 1.01% drop stands out against a green continent. If Novo Nordisk stabilises, the index could snap back — if not, it extends the underperformance gap.
Bottom Line
The setup into Friday leans cautiously risk-on for European equities. Thursday’s broad gains, falling VIX, and the US rotation into financials all favor cyclical and banking names across the continent. The risk is concentrated in tech-heavy corners of the DAX and AEX, where the overnight Nasdaq weakness will need absorbing. Luna3 sees the path of least resistance as higher for most of Europe today, with the weekend positioning question likely keeping any rally measured rather than exuberant.
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