Investing.com – European equities paused just off their fresh highs on Tuesday, taking a breather from a global relief rally as investors shifted their focus from geopolitical euphoria to details of the peace-deal.
The pan-European index gained 0.3%, cruising just below its record peak. While regional bourses capitalized on the initial diplomatic breakthrough, the sentiment remained slightly measured on the continent as market participants grappled with the lack of concrete operational details surrounding the Middle East resolution.
Germany’s rose 0.1%, while France’s gained 0.8%. Italy’s jumped 1.2%, and Spain’s rose 0.7%.
In London, the gained 0.6%. The UK benchmark – which largely sat out Monday’s global rally – remained shackled by its heavy concentration of energy majors like and , which tumbled in tandem with retreating crude prices following the truce.
“The FTSE 100’s lukewarm performance was in stark contrast to its European and US counterparts which charged ahead, although gains were tempered a bit in Europe amid considerable unanswered questions about this promised resolution to the Middle East conflict,” said Dan Coatsworth, head of markets at AJ Bell.
U.S. President Donald Trump said a preliminary agreement to end the war has been signed by the U.S. and Iran, however, details still remained unknown.
The post-war bounce brings Europe’s year-to-date gains to nearly 8%, successfully clawing back wartime losses and narrowing its valuation gap with Wall Street’s .
However, analysts warn that Europe’s upside remains fundamentally measured compared to its global peers. Unlike the U.S. and Asia, Europe’s equity mix lacks the heavyweight technology footprint required to fully exploit the secular artificial intelligence boom – the structural engine that had propelled global markets to records even during the height of the geopolitical friction.
With the conflict having already triggered a pre-emptive rate hike from the European Central Bank, further outperformance hinges entirely on how corporate margins withstand a prolonged high-cost, high-borrowing environment.
Among individual stocks, fell 2.5% after a $1.5 billion dual-tranche convertible bond offering.
Rathbones Group () slumped 17% after the wealth manager said it will pause onboarding new clients for the next one year.
rallied 1.9% as HSBC upgraded the German sportswear maker from Hold to Buy.
shares fell 3.42% after the Swedish security company unveiled a 2030 strategy with a 10% average annual earnings-per-share growth target.
