Europe Markets Weekly — 2026-06-07
European equities faced mixed pressures this week as a global tech sell-off triggered by Broadcom's earnings report rippled across the continent, offsetting resilience in energy stocks. The eurozone economy contracted by 0.2% in Q1 2026, marking the first contraction in over a year, while geopolitical tensions in the Middle East continued to drive energy price volatility and inflation concerns that could prompt further ECB rate hikes.
Europe Markets Weekly — 2026-06-07
Market Snapshot
- STOXX 600: Down 0.2% for the week
- EUR/USD: Weakened to two-month lows around 1.1559 after US jobs data

Key Drivers
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Tech Sector Weakness Spreads: A sell-off in tech stocks that originated with Broadcom's earnings report in the U.S. rippled across European markets, with chip shares falling sharply throughout the week.
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Eurozone Economic Contraction: The eurozone economy contracted by 0.2% in the first quarter of 2026, marking the first contraction in over a year, with a dramatic Irish contraction masking more nuanced performances across major economies. This economic weakness adds pressure on the ECB's policy path.

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ECB Rate Hike Expectations Rise: The euro strengthened on rising expectations of additional ECB rate hikes, with EUR/USD advancing on Friday as traders priced in tighter monetary policy despite economic headwinds. The ECB faces mounting pressure from persistent energy-driven inflation.
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US Jobs Data Pressures Euro: Strong U.S. nonfarm payrolls data lifted the dollar, pushing EUR/USD to two-month lows as traders reassessed the relative monetary policy paths of the Fed and ECB.
Geopolitics & Energy
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Middle East Tensions Drive Energy Volatility: Strait of Hormuz tanker traffic remains significantly disrupted, with most vessels switching off transponders as uncertainty persists over ceasefire negotiations. The conflict's impact on global energy supplies continues to stoke inflation concerns across Europe.
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EU Relaxes Environmental Enforcement for Energy Security: Rising energy costs have lifted eurozone inflation to its highest level since 2023, prompting the EU to plan a three-year waiver on penalties for oil and gas companies that breach methane emissions law in response to energy supply disruptions.
What to Watch Next Week
- ECB monetary policy communications and potential rate hike guidance amid conflicting signals from economic contraction and inflation pressures
- Further developments in Middle East ceasefire negotiations that could stabilize energy prices and ease inflation concerns
- Ongoing tech earnings reports and sector performance as the Broadcom-led sell-off reverberates through global markets
- Eurozone purchasing managers' indices (PMI) data to gauge business sentiment following Q1 GDP contraction
Note: Limited fresh market data became available in the immediate 24-hour window (after 2026-06-05). Most actionable developments centered on macroeconomic indicators, currency moves, and energy supply dynamics rather than detailed index performance or corporate earnings releases.
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