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EU Economy: Weekly Commentary – June 15, 2026

European Market Review

Adrian Van Den Bok and David Pintado

CEO

European Market Review

Eurozone yields fell. Fiscal integration remains limited. Equities rose except Germany. Euro strengthened. Brent crude dropped on easing Middle East tensions and weaker demand expectations.

Last week, Eurozone sovereign bond yields fell across maturities. The broader “global euro” ambition remains limited by the EU’s slow progress toward fiscal integration. Despite record euro-denominated debt issuance and incremental post-pandemic advances, the euro still lacks a deep, unified safe asset comparable to US Treasuries, and proposals such as joint “blue bonds” aimed at pooling sovereign debt and strengthening the EU bond market continue to face political resistance among member states. Equity markets finished the week in positive territory overall, with the exception of Germany, where the main index declined 0.50%, while the euro rose 0.41% against the US dollar. In commodities, Brent crude fell 6.45% as geopolitical risk premiums eased following a reduced perception of escalation in the Middle East, with expectations of renewed negotiations with Iran and reports that planned military action had been called off lowering concerns about supply disruptions, particularly through key routes such as the Strait of Hormuz, while softer demand signals, including reduced Chinese imports, and stable supply conditions added further downward pressure on prices.

Week: 8 – 12 June

Stock Market

Last

% CHG

Currency

Last

% CHG

Euro Stoxx

6187.63

2.07

EUR/USD

1.1569

0.41

Stoxx Europe 600

633.21

1.69

Commodities

Last ($)

% CHG

France

8350.87

1.61

Brent

86.80

-6.45

Germany

24635.30

-0.50

Bond Market - 10 Years

Last

BP

Italy

51497.21

3.22

Germany

3.000%

-4.95

Portugal

9093.82

1.82

France

3.647%

-4.13

Spain

18764.40

2.29

Italy

3.735%

-6.92

Belgium

5737.19

2.82

Spain

3.433%

-3.61

Europe View Synopsis

Eurozone inflation rose to 3.2%, supporting an ECB rate hike. Meanwhile, weak business activity, falling demand, and rising costs signal economic contraction risks.

Eurozone inflation rose to 3.2% YoY in May from 3.0%, remaining above the ECB’s 2% target as higher energy prices and stronger services inflation pushed core inflation to 2.5%, signalling persistent domestic price pressures and a slowdown in the disinflation process. Sticky services inflation, closely linked to wage dynamics, reinforces expectations of a 25bp ECB “insurance” rate hike next week, although markets expect limited further tightening as weaker demand and tighter financial conditions should gradually ease inflation pressures. At the same time, Eurozone private sector activity weakened further, with the Composite PMI falling to 48.5 in May, signalling contraction as softer demand, declining new orders, weaker exports, and the fastest employment decline in 5.5 years weighed on activity. Rising costs and elevated inflation complicate the outlook, with current data pointing to a potential 0.2% GDP contraction in Q2, subdued business confidence, and continued economic fragility across the region.

Interest Rates Decision

ECB raised rates 25bp to 2.25% due to renewed inflation risks from energy shocks, signalling caution after 2022 delays, while keeping growth outlook weak and data-dependent stance.

The European Central Bank (ECB) has raised interest rates by 25 basis points, lifting the deposit rate to 2.25% and marking its first hike since September 2023. The decision reflects renewed inflationary pressures linked to higher energy prices and broader spillovers from geopolitical tensions in the Middle East. Officials framed the move as a pre-emptive step to keep inflation expectations anchored and to ensure price stability is maintained before price pressures become more persistent. It also signals a shift in tone after a prolonged pause, with the ECB increasingly cautious about underestimating new inflation shocks following past experience.

The decision is strongly shaped by lessons from the 2021–2022 inflation episode, when the ECB was widely criticised for reacting too late after initially describing inflation as “transitory.” In that period, inflation surged above 8% while rates were still deeply negative, forcing rapid tightening later on. Today’s context is different: inflation is lower and more contained, policy rates are already in restrictive territory, and inflation breadth is less extreme, with a larger share of components below high single-digit increases than in 2022. ECB staff now project inflation at 3.0% this year, easing to 2.3% in 2027 and reaching the 2.0% target in 2028, while growth remains subdued at 0.8% in 2026, 1.2% in 2027 and 1.5% in 2028, with recent weak momentum not yet fully reflected in the outlook.

During the press conference, ECB President Christine Lagarde stressed that inflationary pressures are broadening and highlighted indirect effects from energy costs on transport and food prices. She maintained a data-dependent, meeting-by-meeting approach but avoided calling the move an “insurance hike,” even as communication left the door open to further tightening. Markets are now pricing a possible additional hike as soon as July or September. At the same time, survey-based inflation expectations have edged slightly lower, suggesting limited signs of de-anchoring. Overall, the ECB is attempting to balance credibility risks from acting too late against the danger of over-tightening into weak growth, mindful of both the 2022 policy delay and the earlier 2011 tightening episode that had to be reversed as the Eurozone economy weakened.

We expect that the ECB will remain cautious, with a possible further rate hike in the coming meetings if energy-driven inflation pressures persist, but any tightening cycle is likely to stay limited given weak growth.

Investors Europe is the trading name of Investors Europe (Malta) Limited, a company authorised and regulated by the Malta Financial Services Authority under the Investment Services Act (Chapter 370, Laws of Malta) (the "ISA") (Depositary Authorisation ID: DOLF-DEPO-16399. Investment Firms Authorisation ID: DOLF-IF-13528), and registered in Malta with company registration number C83564.

Investors Europe is the trading name of Investors Europe (FM) Limited, a company authorised and regulated by the Malta Financial Services Authority, and registered in Malta with company registration number C71750.

Investors Europe is the trading name of Investors Europe (Malta) Limited, a company authorised and regulated by the Malta Financial Services Authority under the Investment Services Act (Chapter 370, Laws of Malta) (the "ISA") (Depositary Authorisation ID: DOLF-DEPO-16399. Investment Firms Authorisation ID: DOLF-IF-13528), and registered in Malta with company registration number C83564.

Investors Europe is the trading name of Investors Europe (FM) Limited, a company authorised and regulated by the Malta Financial Services Authority, and registered in Malta with company registration number C71750.

Investors Europe is the trading name of Investors Europe (Malta) Limited, a company authorised and regulated by the Malta Financial Services Authority under the Investment Services Act (Chapter 370, Laws of Malta) (the "ISA") (Depositary Authorisation ID: DOLF-DEPO-16399. Investment Firms Authorisation ID: DOLF-IF-13528), and registered in Malta with company registration number C83564.

Investors Europe is the trading name of Investors Europe (FM) Limited, a company authorised and regulated by the Malta Financial Services Authority, and registered in Malta with company registration number C71750.