European equities began Friday trading with little net movement as investors tried to reconcile two opposing forces: soothing headlines about a ceasefire-related agreement in the Middle East and growing concern that the Federal Reserve will tighten policy sooner than previously expected.
The pan-European STOXX 600 opened essentially flat. National bourses showed small divergences: Germany's DAX rose 0.2%, while France's CAC 40 and Italy's FTSE MIB advanced 0.3% each. London's FTSE 100 bucked the region's modest gains and opened 0.1% lower.
Tensions flared briefly after U.S. Vice President JD Vance withdrew from a planned visit to Switzerland to meet Iranian negotiators. That trip had been scheduled for later in the day and was intended to begin discussions on implementing a 14-point agreement between Washington and Tehran.
Weekly picture
European stocks are positioned to log a second consecutive week of gains, supported by news of a landmark accord that reopened the Strait of Hormuz and prompted a sharp drop in crude prices. The decline in oil provided relief to markets that had been anxious about the prospect of a prolonged inflation shock.
Even so, Europe’s roughly 0.6% advance for the week looked muted compared with rallies of more than 1% seen in Asian markets. The region's upside was limited by a mid-week shift in tone from the Federal Reserve, which surprised some investors by adopting a firmer stance on rates.
Markets rapidly adjusted expectations after the Fed's comments, with traders pricing in about an 80% probability of a rate increase in October. The Fed's new chair, Kevin Warsh, signaled he would provide less forward guidance than previous leaders, a move market participants said adds to uncertainty.
"The Fed struck a surprisingly hawkish tone on rates and spooked investors, as new chair Kevin Warsh indicated he would give less direction on future policy than had previously been the case," said Dan Coatsworth, head of markets at AJ Bell.
Coatsworth added that reduced guidance from the central bank "means more of the uncertainty which markets typically hate."
Sector and stock moves
Energy names weighed on the U.K. benchmark, with BP PLC (LON:BP) and Shell PLC (AS:SHEL) cited as key drags amid the fall in crude. The weakness in major oil producers contributed to the FTSE 100's underperformance, leaving it on track for a weekly decline of about 0.9%.
Airline shares, including Lufthansa, Air France-KLM and British Airways-owner ICAG, rallied this week as lower fuel costs eased pressure on carriers' operating outlooks.
On the political front in Britain, attention centered on Labour mayor Andy Burnham winning a parliamentary seat, a result the article says clears a path to challenging Prime Minister Keir Starmer - a development that kept U.K. equities under a particular spotlight.
Outlook
Markets appear caught between the risk-reducing effect of improved Middle East relations and the growth-limiting potential of earlier-than-expected interest-rate increases. Investors will likely remain sensitive to both geopolitical developments that affect energy prices and the evolving signals from the Fed on near-term policy.