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Europe Market Preview: Thursday, July 09, 2026

Europe Market Preview: Thursday, July 09, 2026

Europe market preview cover image for July 09, 2026

Europe Market Preview: Thursday, July 09, 2026

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Key PointsAbout This Summary iAn AI tool helped create this summary based on the text of the article. The Luna3 team has checked it for accuracy and revised as necessary. Read more about how we use AI in our publishing process.
  • European indices fell hard Wednesday — IBEX -2.73%, DAX -2.23%, CAC -2.18% — as Strait of Hormuz tensions rattled energy-exposed markets
  • US session split: Nasdaq eked out +0.20% on tech strength while financials dropped -1.93% and materials sank -2.62%, signaling risk rotation not broad recovery
  • Gold above $4,100 and copper +2.36% overnight point to safe-haven demand and supply-chain repricing that will carry into Thursday's European open

Where Europe Closed Last Session

Wednesday was a washout across the continent. Spain’s IBEX 35 led the damage at -2.73%, followed closely by the DAX 40 at -2.23% and the CAC 40 at -2.18%. The Euro STOXX 50 dropped -1.82%, confirming the selloff was eurozone-wide rather than isolated to one market.

The FTSE 100 fell -1.66%, underperforming its usual defensive reputation. The SMI lost -1.30% as even Swiss defensives failed to hold. Italy’s FTSE MIB declined -1.22%, a relatively modest loss given the broader carnage. The AEX stood out as the most resilient major index at just -0.26% — ASML’s weight likely cushioned the Dutch benchmark as tech held up better than cyclicals globally.

Copenhagen’s OMX 25 was the sole green print at +0.42%, a reminder that Nordic healthcare and shipping names sometimes decouple from eurozone macro stress. The pattern across the rest of Europe was clear: anything tied to trade flows, energy costs, or rate sensitivity got hit. Banks, industrials, and commodity-linked names bore the worst of it. The IBEX’s outsized loss reflects Spain’s sensitivity to energy import costs — a theme that intensified overnight.

US Overnight Snapshot

Wall Street closed mixed but the internals told a sharper story. The S&P 500 slipped -0.28% while the Nasdaq Composite managed +0.20%, propped up by a +1.24% gain in the technology sector. The Russell 2000 dropped -0.91%, showing small-cap risk appetite evaporating.

The real signal sat in sector rotation. Financials fell -1.93% — a direct read-through for European banks at the open. Materials collapsed -2.62%, the session’s worst performer, which will weigh on mining-heavy FTSE constituents like Rio Tinto and Glencore. Energy gained +1.76% as Strait of Hormuz headlines pushed crude higher after hours. The VIX rose +4.77% to 16.9 — not panic territory, but the sharpest single-session jump in weeks, and enough to signal hedging demand is picking up.

For Europe, the tech strength offers a narrow lifeline for SAP and ASML. Everything else in the US session points to continued pressure on cyclicals and financials when London and Frankfurt open.

Commodity + FX Watch

Gold climbed +1.04% above $4,100, reinforcing the safe-haven bid as geopolitical risk reprices. That’s supportive for Swiss gold refiners and London-listed precious metals miners. WTI oil edged down -0.29% in the regular session but after-hours headlines about additional US strikes on Iran and the Strait of Hormuz returning to “full-conflict conditions” suggest the energy complex will gap higher at the European open — watch Shell, BP, and TotalEnergies closely.

Copper surged +2.36%, its strongest move in weeks, which should give a lift to Antofagasta and Boliden if the bid holds. The dollar edged higher on crude strength and weak equities — a headwind for euro-denominated exporters like Airbus and LVMH. AUD/USD gained +0.29% to 0.694, reflecting the commodity-linked currency catching a bid from metals strength. USD/JPY barely moved at 162, keeping the yen carry trade intact and offering no relief for Japanese-competitive European automakers.

What to Watch Today

  • Strait of Hormuz escalation: Headlines overnight describe “full-conflict conditions” and additional US military strikes on Iran. European energy names will reprice at the open — BP, Shell, TotalEnergies, and Equinor are the direct plays, but the second-order hit lands on airlines (fuel costs) and European industrials (input inflation). This is the single biggest variable for Thursday’s session.
  • Bank of America’s “two economies” warning: The research note flagging a split US consumer adds to the case for defensive positioning. European luxury (LVMH, Hermès, Kering) depends on top-end US spending holding — if that thesis wobbles, Paris will feel it.
  • FTSE mining response to copper’s +2.36% overnight move: Rio Tinto, Anglo American, and Glencore could outperform the broader FTSE if the copper bid holds through Asian trading. Materials were the worst US sector at -2.62%, but that was driven by domestic names — the London-listed miners trade on global commodity pricing, not US construction sentiment.
  • AEX resilience test: The Dutch index lost just -0.26% Wednesday while peers dropped 1.5-2.7%. If ASML and Adyen hold up again on Thursday, it confirms a quality-tech premium that could widen further in a risk-off tape.

Bottom Line

Thursday’s European open looks like a split session: energy names bid higher on Hormuz escalation, defensives and gold miners catching safe-haven flows, and everything in between — banks, industrials, luxury — under continued pressure. The US session offered no all-clear, with financials weak, volatility rising, and only big tech holding the line. Luna3 sees the risk-off lean persisting until the geopolitical premium either gets absorbed or escalates further — and the headlines overnight suggest we’re not at the absorption stage yet.

Read next: Europe Markets · What Is an ETF? · What Is HBM Memory?

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