Europe Markets Weekly — 2026-06-27
European markets closed the week in decline as a tech sector selloff and rising US inflation expectations overshadowed earlier gains from geopolitical relief. The STOXX 600 retreated from record highs as investors reassessed Fed rate-hike risks, while energy prices fell sharply on expectations of increased Iranian oil exports. Inflation concerns and sector rotation toward defensive assets dominated trading sentiment.
Europe Markets Weekly — 2026-06-27
Market Snapshot
- STOXX 600: Fell 0.99% as of Friday morning, retreating from record highs reached earlier in the week
- DAX: Dropped 1.31%
- FTSE 100: Slid 0.81%
- CAC 40: Declined 0.69%

Key Drivers
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Technology Sector Collapse: Chip and advanced technology manufacturers recorded significant declines across Frankfurt, Paris, and Amsterdam trading floors. European sector leaders such as ASML and Infineon fell as OpenAI reportedly delayed its IPO and a broader tech selloff gathered pace
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US Inflation Concerns Weigh on Fed Rate Expectations: Rising US PCE inflation lifted the dollar and sparked expectations for higher US interest rate hikes. The EUR/USD pair weakened toward a 13-month low near 1.1350 as market participants reassessed monetary policy outlooks
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Eurozone Inflation Expectations Cool: ECB Consumer Expectations Survey results showed one-year forward eurozone inflation expectations cooling to 3.5%, though longer-term projections remained steady, providing some relief to policymakers

Geopolitics & Energy
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Crude Oil Prices Sink on Iranian Supply Recovery Bets: Crude oil posted a steep weekly decline as traders unwound geopolitical risk premiums following expectations that Iranian exports and Strait of Hormuz shipping will gradually recover. This reflected broader relief from earlier Middle East tensions
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EU Gas Supplies at Risk from Climate Regulations: Qatar and the US warned the European Union that stricter methane regulations on LNG could trigger a gas crunch and higher prices, complicating Europe's strategy to replace Russian energy sources ahead of the 2027 phase-out deadline

What to Watch Next Week
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ECB Economic Bulletin and Monetary Policy Signals: Watch for any updated guidance on interest rate trajectories and inflation management as the central bank monitors eurozone price pressures and geopolitical risks
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US Inflation Data and Fed Commentary: Further clarity on US PCE inflation and Fed rate-hike intentions will likely drive European equity valuations and currency movements heading into early July
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Energy Markets and EU Policy Developments: Monitor ongoing negotiations over EU methane regulations and their impact on LNG supply contracts and European energy prices
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