Economy June 8, 2026 03:42 AM

STOXX 600 Falls to Two-Week Low as Middle East Tensions and AI Sector Selloff Weigh

Oil spikes and tech losses drag pan-European index lower; Monte dei Paschi surges after Intesa Sanpaolo takeover offer

By Caleb Monroe
Share
Twitter Reddit Facebook LinkedIn

Europe’s STOXX 600 slipped to a two-week trough as renewed clashes between Israel and Iran sent crude higher and a global downturn in AI-related shares hit technology names. Broad losses across regional markets were punctuated by a surge in Monte dei Paschi di Siena after Intesa Sanpaolo announced an unsolicited €30.6 billion cash-and-share bid.

STOXX 600 Falls to Two-Week Low as Middle East Tensions and AI Sector Selloff Weigh
Summarize with
ChatGPT Perplexity Claude Grok Gemini

Key Points

  • STOXX 600 down 0.9% to 616.04 by 0812 GMT, with all major regional indexes in the red.
  • Crude oil prices climbed over 4% after Israel and Iran exchanged fire, pressuring energy-sensitive sectors such as airlines.
  • Italian lender Monte dei Paschi di Siena rose 9.5% after Intesa Sanpaolo made an unsolicited 30.6 billion cash-and-share offer; Intesa shares slipped 3.2%.

Europe’s STOXX 600 share index fell to a two-week low on Monday, pressured by rising Middle East tensions and a continued global selloff in AI-related stocks, while takeover activity in Italy lifted one domestic lender.

By 0812 GMT the pan-European STOXX 600 was down 0.9% at 616.04 points, with all major regional indexes trading in negative territory. A spike in crude oil prices - up more than 4% after Israel and Iran exchanged fire over the weekend - added to market unease, threatening a fragile ceasefire in the region and diminishing hopes for a swift resolution to the conflict.

Energy-sensitive sectors felt direct pressure from the jump in oil. Airlines were among the notable decliners, with carriers such as Lufthansa and Air France each falling by more than 2% as higher fuel costs feed through to operating margins.

Technology stocks were also a leading drag, sliding 2.1% as European tech firms tracked sharp sector losses seen abroad late last week in the United States and in Asia on Monday. Semiconductor and components names underperformed, with Infineon down 1.7% and BE Semiconductor off 3.8%. Equipment suppliers tied to artificial intelligence deployments also retreated, with Legrand and Schneider Electric each losing about 2%.

Despite the recent pullback, European technology has recorded the strongest quarterly gains among STOXX 600 sectors so far this quarter.

Macro developments added to the backdrop. A stronger-than-expected U.S. jobs report has been interpreted as giving the Federal Reserve more scope to hold interest rates steady for now, while market participants are still factoring in the possibility of a rate increase in December. Attention in Europe has shifted toward the European Central Bank’s policy decision due on Thursday, where markets have already priced in a 25-basis-point interest rate hike.

In corporate news, Italian bank Monte dei Paschi di Siena rallied after a rival struck a takeover bid. Monte dei Paschi jumped 9.5% following an unsolicited cash-and-share offer from Italy’s largest banking group, Intesa Sanpaolo, valued at 30.6 billion. Shares of Intesa Sanpaolo fell 3.2% on the announcement.


Market context:

  • Broad-based selling pushed the STOXX 600 to a two-week low, with energy, airlines and technology among the worst hit.
  • Crude oil rose sharply amid military exchanges between Israel and Iran, raising input-cost concerns for energy-dependent sectors across Europe.
  • Monetary policy considerations - a stronger U.S. jobs report and an ECB decision priced for a 25-basis-point hike - are adding to investor caution.

Risks

  • Escalation in the Middle East could keep oil prices elevated, hitting energy-dependent industries and squeezing airline margins.
  • Further global weakness in AI-related and technology stocks may prolong pressure on European tech sector performance and overall market sentiment.
  • Market pricing of a 25-basis-point ECB rate hike introduces policy-driven volatility ahead of the banks decision on Thursday.

More from Economy

Markets on Edge as Mideast Strikes Renew and Apple Prepares WWDC Focused on AI Jun 8, 2026 Margin borrowing spikes as chip-led selloff tests South Korea’s retail investors Jun 8, 2026 ECB Faces Delicate Trade-Off as Energy Shock Rekindles Inflation Fears Jun 8, 2026 Hungary’s Lower Inflation and Shrinking Risk Premia May Reduce Required Policy Rate, Deputy Governor Says Jun 8, 2026 Inflation in India Likely Climbed to 4% in May as Food and Fuel Costs Accelerate Jun 8, 2026