- European indices rallied 1.3-2.6% in their last session, led by IBEX 35 and Euro STOXX 50, setting a strong base heading into Tuesday
- Nasdaq 100 surged 3.14% overnight with VIX crushed to 17.7, signaling broad risk-on carry for the European open
- Triple witching looms Friday — elevated options activity and AI infrastructure momentum from US tech could drive volume in ASML, SAP, and Infineon
European indices posted their strongest broad-based rally in weeks last Friday, with every major benchmark finishing higher — and the US overnight session added fuel, with the Nasdaq 100 jumping 3.14% and the VIX collapsing below 18. Tuesday’s open inherits a clear risk-on setup, and the question is whether European equities can extend the run after the long weekend break.
Where Europe Closed Last Session
Friday’s session was uniformly green across the continent, but the strength was concentrated in southern Europe and the broader Eurozone composite. The IBEX 35 led the board at +2.59%, pushing to 18,764 — Spanish banks and industrials caught a strong bid. The Euro STOXX 50 climbed 2.16% to 6,188, its best single-session gain in several weeks, while the FTSE MIB added 1.96% to clear the 51,000 level.
The core trio kept pace. The CAC 40 rose 1.83% to 8,351, the DAX 40 gained 1.76% to 24,635, and the FTSE 100 advanced 1.63% to 10,472. The AEX in Amsterdam tracked the pack at +1.70%. Even the typically defensive SMI in Zurich posted a respectable +1.32% to 13,708, though it lagged the Eurozone names — a sign that the rally was risk-seeking rather than defensive.
The OMX Copenhagen 25, which traded on Monday, edged up just 0.19% to 1,766 — a muted session compared to Friday’s continent-wide push, suggesting some of the initial momentum may have already cooled at the margins.
US Overnight Snapshot
The US session extended the risk-on tone convincingly. The S&P 500 added 0.50% while the Nasdaq 100 surged 3.14% — a standout move driven by continued AI infrastructure enthusiasm. Headlines around Vertiv, Ciena, Semtech, and HPE all reinforced the narrative that AI factory buildout is accelerating, which should support European semiconductor and industrial tech names like ASML, Infineon, and SAP at the open.
The Russell 2000 gained 0.82%, confirming breadth beyond mega-cap tech. Sector leadership came from Materials (+1.87%) and Financials (+1.37%), both of which translate directly to European cyclicals — think BASF, Rio Tinto, and the Eurozone banking complex. The VIX dropped 9.05% to 17.7, well below the 20 threshold, removing any volatility overhang. Options traders are already positioning for Friday’s triple witching, which could amplify volume as the week progresses.
Commodity + FX Watch
Gold held steady at roughly $4,340, up 0.24% — not enough to signal a defensive shift, but enough to keep the floor under European gold miners like Fresnillo. WTI crude was essentially flat at $80.70, though headlines about a potential US-Iran deal could pressure prices further if progress materializes — worth watching for Shell, BP, and TotalEnergies. Copper slipped 0.67% to $6.44, a minor drag on European miners but not yet a trend reversal.
On the FX side, the dollar firmed modestly — USD/JPY ticked up 0.16% to 160 and AUD/USD slipped 0.25% to 0.706. A marginally stronger dollar would offer a mild tailwind to European exporters like Airbus, LVMH, and the German auto complex, where revenue is dollar-denominated but costs are in euros.
What to Watch Today
- Post-holiday catch-up bid: Most European markets were closed Monday. Friday’s strong close plus the US overnight rally create a gap-up setup — the first 30 minutes of trading will reveal whether real buying follows the implied bid or if the gap gets faded.
- Triple witching positioning: Friday June 19 is quarterly options and futures expiry. Expect rising volumes and gamma-driven swings as the week progresses, particularly in DAX futures and Euro STOXX 50 options.
- AI infrastructure carry-through: The US overnight session was dominated by AI data center and networking names. ASML, SAP, Infineon, and STMicroelectronics are the direct European beneficiaries — watch whether they lead at the open or if the rotation favors cyclicals instead.
- Iran deal and energy pricing: Oil executives are pushing back on consumer expectations for lower gas prices, but any progress on the reported US-Iran negotiations could hit Brent crude and pressure the FTSE 100’s energy heavyweights, which make up roughly 12% of the index.
Bottom Line
The setup for Tuesday’s European open is straightforwardly risk-on. A broad Friday rally, a strong US overnight session led by tech and materials, and a VIX below 18 all point toward an upbeat tone — particularly for Eurozone cyclicals and tech. The main variable is whether the post-holiday gap-up holds or invites profit-taking, especially with triple witching approaching and volumes likely to build through the week. Luna3 sees the carry-over favoring buyers, but the conviction trade is in names with direct AI infrastructure exposure rather than the broad index.
Read next: Europe Markets · What Is an ETF? · What Is HBM Memory?
Get early access to Orbit
Orbit is Luna3.ai’s AI-augmented research engine. 12 algorithmic signals + a gradient-boosted ML model + an agentic LLM that reads each top pick’s filings and writes a daily thesis with conviction score and catalyst proximity. Three regimes, three playbooks — growth in expansion, defensives in late-cycle, recovery plays at panic bottoms. The 3 in Luna3.ai.
No spam. Unsubscribe any time.
No comments yet. Be the first to share your thoughts!