Week Ahead: European Stocks Hit Record Highs on a Softer Dollar as a Cautious ECB and Wednesday’s Fed Minutes Set the Tone | European Session Weekly | 6–10 July 2026
Week Ahead: European Stocks Hit Record Highs on a Softer Dollar as a Cautious ECB and Wednesday’s Fed Minutes Set the Tone
ECB Accounts of June Meeting Thu 9 Jul · US FOMC Minutes Tue 7 Jul · UK Political Transition Watch · Full European session trade ideas and economic calendar for week of 6–10 July 2026
EUR/USD at 1.1437 enters the week roughly in the middle of its 2026 trading range, having recovered from a June low near 1.1354 but still well below January’s high above 1.20. Wednesday’s softer Eurozone inflation print — 2.8% headline, 2.4% core, both below forecasts — combined with President Lagarde’s comment at the ECB’s Sintra Forum that risks to inflation and growth have become “more balanced” mark a clear shift in tone from the ECB’s decision three weeks earlier to become the first G7 central bank to hike rates after the Iran-related oil shock. Thursday’s ECB Accounts of the June meeting is this week’s key scheduled input for gauging how much of that hawkish momentum survives into the 23 July decision; a more dovish-leaning account would likely cap EUR/USD gains, while any hint that further tightening remains live could extend the pair’s recovery toward 1.16–1.17.
GBP/USD at 1.3350 has climbed to a two-week high, driven overwhelmingly by broad US dollar weakness following Thursday’s disappointing US payrolls report rather than by domestic UK strength. Bank of England Governor Andrew Bailey’s dovish remarks at Sintra — flagging a slowing UK economy while ruling out imminent rate cuts given persistent inflation risks — leave the pair unusually dependent on the dollar side of the equation, since UK and US policy rates currently sit almost level. The bigger swing factor for sterling this year has arguably become politics rather than monetary policy: former Prime Minister Keir Starmer’s resignation in June, and the expected transition of Andy Burnham to the premiership in late July, has introduced a leadership-vacuum risk that markets are only beginning to price. This week’s calendar is comparatively light on that front, but any fresh headlines on the Labour transition could move gilts and sterling independent of the broader dollar narrative.
Silver at $62.37 has staged a sharp rebound off a seven-month low near $57.80, helped by Fed Chair Kevin Warsh’s acknowledgment that US inflation expectations have eased and by Thursday’s weak jobs report, which cut market-implied odds of a September Fed hike toward 50% from around 67% beforehand. The metal remains highly sensitive to the coming week’s US FOMC minutes, which could either reinforce or challenge the market’s reduced hawkish pricing. Wheat at $5.88/bu tells a more two-sided story: USDA’s June 1 stocks report showed inventories below expectations and the annual acreage survey confirmed the smallest US wheat plantings in decades, both supportive factors, but the advancing US winter wheat harvest — running well ahead of both last year and the five-year average — and favourable Black Sea production prospects have kept a lid on any sustained rally.
The FTSE 100 at 10,634 is the standout European equity story this week, sitting within roughly 2.8% of its 52-week high of 10,935 after a sharp rotation into defensive, pharmaceutical and defence shares left the index largely untouched by a global technology-stock selloff. Germany’s 10-year Bund yield at 2.95% has drifted toward a near two-week high, tracking US Treasury yields higher even as the ECB’s own commentary has turned more cautious — a divergence that Thursday’s ECB Accounts release should help clarify. In crypto, Ethereum at $1,753 remains deeply oversold and firmly in Extreme Fear territory, down nearly half from January’s peak, while Litecoin at $43.15 has found more constructive, if still modest, support from the recent launch of a spot Litecoin ETF alongside a broader crypto risk-on bounce.
Three Forces That Will Drive the European Session — 6 to 10 July 2026
The catalysts, decisions, and data points that will set the direction across FX, commodities, equities, rates, and digital assets in the week ahead
European Session Weekly Trade Ideas
Eight instrument-specific setups with entry, stop, and target levels for the week of 6–10 July 2026. All levels for reference only; not financial advice. Visit capitalstreetfx.com for live signals.
Thesis — Buy Dips Toward 1.1350; Dollar Softness Outweighs a Dovish ECB Tone For Now
EUR/USD at 1.1437 has recovered from June’s low near 1.1354 largely on broad US dollar weakness following Thursday’s disappointing jobs report, even as the ECB’s own rhetoric has turned more cautious. President Lagarde’s Sintra comment that inflation and growth risks are now “more balanced” marks a clear softening from the hawkish tone that accompanied the ECB’s June rate hike, and Thursday’s Accounts of that meeting will be the week’s key test of how durable that hawkish momentum really was. CSFX’s framework leans toward buying dips rather than chasing rallies, on the view that a structurally softer US labour market gives the dollar more room to weaken than the euro has room to rally on its own merits.
The entry at 1.1350 reflects a buy against the recent range low, with the stop at 1.1250 placed below the June closing low to invalidate the recovery thesis. The take profit at 1.1650 targets a retest of the upper end of the pair’s recent multi-month range. CSFX recommends monitoring Thursday’s ECB Accounts closely — a materially hawkish surprise would accelerate this trade, while a dovish confirmation would likely require patience for the position to work given the ECB’s own 23 July decision still lies ahead.
Thesis — Two-Sided Range Trade; Political Transition Risk Keeps Conviction Low
GBP/USD at 1.3350 sits in a genuinely two-sided setup. With UK and US policy rates almost level at 3.75% and 3.50–3.75% respectively, the pair currently has little yield-differential pull in either direction, leaving it unusually exposed to broad dollar sentiment and to UK-specific political risk. Bank of England Governor Bailey’s dovish Sintra tone on a slowing economy is balanced by his explicit ruling-out of imminent rate cuts, which limits the case for a strong directional BoE-driven view either way. The bigger swing factor is the ongoing Labour leadership transition, with Andy Burnham expected to become Prime Minister in late July — a process that echoes, on a smaller scale, the market stress seen around the 2022 mini-budget episode.
CSFX’s approach is to buy dips toward 1.3250 with a stop at 1.3100 below the recent range low, targeting a retest of 1.3550 on continued dollar softness. Given the genuinely two-sided risk from UK politics, position sizing should stay conservative, and any fresh headline on the Labour transition should be treated as a potential trigger for a sharp, headline-driven move in either direction.
Thesis — Buy the Bounce Off Seven-Month Lows as Fed Rate-Hike Odds Fade
Silver at $62.37 has staged one of the sharpest reversals across this report, rebounding from a seven-month low near $57.80 after Fed Chair Kevin Warsh acknowledged that US inflation expectations have eased and after Thursday’s weak jobs report cut the market-implied odds of a September Fed hike to roughly 50% from around 67% beforehand. The metal’s underlying structural story — a sixth consecutive annual global supply deficit per the Silver Institute — remains intact, but near-term price action has been dominated by Fed-hike repricing following June’s hawkish dot plot scare, which had driven silver down more than 30% from January’s all-time high above $110.
The entry at $58.50 reflects a buy on a pullback toward the recent breakout zone, with the stop at $55.00 placed below the seven-month low to invalidate the reversal thesis. The take profit at $68.00 targets a retest of the psychological resistance zone that capped rallies earlier in the year. Wednesday’s US FOMC minutes are the week’s key scheduled catalyst — a dovish-leaning set of minutes would likely extend this bounce, while any hawkish surprise on the internal hike debate could quickly reverse the week’s gains given how sentiment-driven this move has been.
Thesis — Fade Rallies Toward $6.15; Ample Global Supply Should Cap the Bounce
Wheat at $5.88/bu has recovered from a near four-month low after USDA’s June 1 stocks report showed inventories of 920 million bushels, below expectations, and the annual acreage survey confirmed US wheat plantings at 42.74 million acres, the smallest in decades. Those figures reinforced expectations of tighter US supplies and briefly lifted the complex. However, CSFX’s framework is that this rally has structural headwinds: the US winter wheat harvest is running well ahead of both last year and the five-year average pace, and production prospects across the Black Sea region remain favourable, both of which point toward ample global supplies that should ultimately reassert themselves.
The entry at $6.15 reflects a fade of any further recovery toward the recent range highs, with the stop at $6.35 placed above the level that would signal the tight-supply narrative is overriding the harvest-driven bearish case. The take profit at $5.65 targets a retest of the recent lows. Thursday’s weekly USDA export sales report is the key scheduled catalyst — strong export demand, particularly from Asian buyers, would be the clearest near-term upside risk to this trade.
Thesis — Buy Dips Toward 10,500; Defensive Rotation Has Room to Extend Into Record Territory
The FTSE 100 at 10,634 has rallied 2.9% this week, driven by a powerful rotation into defensive, pharmaceutical and defence shares — AstraZeneca, GSK, BAE Systems and Babcock International were among the standout gainers — that left the index largely insulated from a sharp global technology-stock selloff. The index’s heavy weighting toward energy majors, banks and defensives has historically made it a relative beneficiary during periods of technology-sector stress and falling US rate expectations, both of which have been in play this week. With the index now sitting within roughly 2.8% of its 52-week high of 10,935, CSFX’s framework favours buying dips rather than chasing the current rally.
The entry at 10,500 reflects a buy on a pullback into the recent breakout zone, with the stop at 10,300 placed below the level that would signal the defensive rotation is losing momentum. The take profit at 10,900 targets a test of the 52-week high. A continuation of soft US data that extends the current risk-on-for-defensives dynamic would be the clearest catalyst for a push into fresh record territory.
Thesis — Fade the Yield Rise Toward 3.05%; A Dovish ECB Should Cap Further Upside
Germany’s 10-year Bund yield at 2.95% has climbed to a near two-week high, tracking US Treasury yields higher into Thursday’s US jobs data. This move sits somewhat awkwardly alongside President Lagarde’s markedly more dovish tone at the Sintra Forum, where she described inflation and growth risks as “more balanced” than they appeared three weeks earlier, when the ECB became the first G7 central bank to hike rates after the Iran-related oil shock. CSFX’s framework is that Thursday’s ECB Accounts of the June meeting should help resolve this tension, and that a dovish-leaning account is the more likely outcome given the intervening drop in oil prices and softer Eurozone inflation data.
The trade here is framed as fading a further rise in yields (i.e., expecting Bund prices to recover) toward 3.05%, with a stop at 3.15% above the level that would signal the ECB’s hawkish June momentum is more durable than currently priced, and a target at 2.85% reflecting a retracement back toward the prior two-month low. This is a genuine two-way risk trade, and CSFX recommends reduced position sizing given Thursday’s ECB Accounts could move yields sharply in either direction.
Thesis — Fade Bounces Toward $1,850; Structural Downtrend Remains Firmly Intact
Ethereum at $1,753 remains one of the weakest major assets in this report, trading below its 20-day, 50-day, 100-day and 200-day exponential moving averages and down nearly 50% from January’s peak above $3,400. Every recovery attempt through the first half of 2026 has been aggressively sold into, and the $1,500–$1,547 zone represents the last meaningful technical floor before what several analysts describe as genuinely uncharted territory. Sentiment readings remain firmly in Extreme Fear, and CSFX’s framework is that oversold bounces within this structure should be treated as selling opportunities rather than the start of a genuine reversal until ETH reclaims the 20-day EMA on a sustained basis.
The entry at $1,850 reflects a fade of any relief bounce into the recent resistance zone, with the stop at $1,950 placed above the level that would signal a more durable reversal is underway. The take profit at $1,450 targets a retest of the critical support shelf. CSFX recommends conservative position sizing given how deeply oversold conditions already are — a sharp, sentiment-driven short squeeze cannot be ruled out even within a structurally bearish trend.
Thesis — Accumulate on Dips Toward $38; ETF Flows Offer a New, if Modest, Demand Source
Litecoin at $43.15 has bounced roughly 4.5% this week alongside the broader crypto complex, though it remains down approximately 45% year-to-date. The key structural development for LTC in 2026 has been the launch of the Canary spot Litecoin ETF under ticker LTCC, which — while still modest in assets under management — gives institutional and retail brokerage clients regulated exposure to the asset for the first time and creates a demand source somewhat independent of retail exchange flows. Litecoin’s price action remains heavily correlated with Bitcoin’s own attempt to stabilise, and CSFX’s framework treats the current bounce as a tentative, sentiment-driven recovery rather than a confirmed trend reversal.
The entry at $38.00 reflects accumulation on a pullback toward recent support, with the stop at $34.00 placed below the level that would signal renewed broad crypto-market weakness. The take profit at $52.00 targets a retest of levels last seen in the second quarter. Given Litecoin’s continued high-beta relationship with Bitcoin, position sizing should remain conservative and closely tied to the broader crypto market’s own direction.
What Could Move European Markets Sharply This Week
The scheduled and unscheduled events that CSFX is watching most closely for the European session, 6–10 July 2026
European Session — Economic Calendar, 6–10 July 2026
All times approximate, Central European Summer Time (CEST, UTC+2). Key releases for EUR/USD, GBP/USD, Silver, Wheat, FTSE 100, Germany 10Y, Ethereum, and Litecoin.
| Day | Time (CEST) | Release | Impact | Forecast | CSFX View |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Monday, 6 July | |||||
| Mon | 10:30 CEST | Eurozone Sentix Investor Confidence (July) | MED | +5.0 | An early read on investor sentiment ahead of Thursday’s ECB Accounts. A stronger print would support the case that the Eurozone economy can absorb a more cautious ECB stance; a weak print would reinforce dovish expectations. |
| Mon | All Day | US Markets Closed (Independence Day Observed) | LOW | N/A | Thinner liquidity across FX and precious metals is likely into the European close, with US markets shut for the Independence Day holiday observance. |
| Tuesday, 7 July | |||||
| Tue | 08:00 CEST | Germany Industrial Production (May) | HIGH | +0.3% MoM | A key gauge of Eurozone economic momentum ahead of the ECB’s 23 July decision. A stronger print would support the case for continued ECB vigilance; a miss would reinforce the dovish Sintra tone and could weigh modestly on EUR/USD and Bund yields. |
| Tue | 08:00 CEST | Germany Trade Balance (May) | MED | €18.5B surplus | A secondary Eurozone data point. A wider surplus would offer modest euro support; a narrower one would align with broader growth-concern narratives from Sintra. |
| Tue | 20:00 ET (~02:00 CEST Wed) | US FOMC June Meeting Minutes | HIGH | N/A | Lands overnight into Wednesday’s European open. Hawkish detail on the September hike debate would pressure the dollar-softness narrative behind this week’s EUR/USD, GBP/USD and silver gains; a dovish tilt would extend it. |
| Wednesday, 8 July | |||||
| Wed | 11:00 CEST | Eurozone Retail Sales (May) | MED | +0.2% MoM | A secondary gauge of Eurozone consumer demand ahead of Thursday’s ECB Accounts. A resilient print supports the case the economy can handle a more cautious ECB stance; a weak print reinforces the dovish narrative. |
| Wed | 09:30 CEST | UK Halifax House Price Index (June) | MED | +0.2% MoM | A secondary UK housing gauge that feeds into the broader picture of domestic economic health that BoE Governor Bailey referenced at Sintra. A weak print would reinforce his dovish tone; a strong one would provide modest sterling support. |
| Thursday, 9 July | |||||
| Thu | 14:30 CEST | ECB Accounts of the June Monetary Policy Meeting | HIGH | N/A | The week’s single most important release. A hawkish-leaning account supports EUR/USD and keeps Bund yields elevated into the 23 July decision; a dovish-leaning account confirms the tone struck at Sintra and would likely cap the euro’s recent gains. |
| Thu | 14:30 ET (~20:30 CEST) | USDA Weekly Export Sales Report | HIGH | 15–25M bu wheat | The key scheduled catalyst for wheat this week. Strong export demand would be the clearest near-term upside risk to CSFX’s fade-the-rally framework; soft demand would reinforce the bearish harvest-driven case. |
| Friday, 10 July | |||||
| Fri | 08:00 CEST | UK Monthly GDP Estimate (May) | HIGH | +0.1% MoM | The week’s key UK growth data point. A soft print would reinforce BoE Governor Bailey’s dovish characterisation of a slowing economy; a stronger print would complicate the case for near-term sterling weakness independent of the dollar. |
| Fri | All Day | Litecoin ETF (LTCC) Weekly Flow Data | MED | N/A | Continued net inflows into the Canary spot Litecoin ETF would reinforce this week’s bullish accumulation case for LTC; a reversal into outflows would raise questions about the durability of institutional demand at current levels. |
European Session — Trader Questions Answered
Key questions from CSFX clients ahead of the ECB’s dovish pivot, the UK’s political transition, the FTSE 100’s record test, and crypto’s uneven recovery
CSFX View: The European Session Weighs a Dovish ECB Pivot, a Sterling Political Handover, and a Defensive-Led FTSE 100 Record Test
The week of 6–10 July 2026 presents a European session dominated by a single question carried over from Friday: does last week’s US-jobs-driven dollar softness extend, or do region-specific catalysts take over. EUR/USD has recovered to 1.1437, but Thursday’s ECB Accounts of the June meeting will be the key test of how much of the ECB’s hawkish momentum survives President Lagarde’s markedly more dovish Sintra tone ahead of the 23 July decision. GBP/USD at 1.3350 has climbed to a two-week high largely on dollar weakness, with UK political transition risk building quietly in the background ahead of Andy Burnham’s expected move to the premiership in late July. In commodities, silver at $62.37 has staged a sharp rebound off seven-month lows on fading Fed-hike expectations, while wheat at $5.88/bu remains caught between tight US supply data and ample global stocks. In equities, the FTSE 100 at 10,634 has surged to within reach of its 52-week high on a defensive-led rotation that has left it largely insulated from a global technology-stock selloff, while Germany’s 10-year Bund yield at 2.95% sits in tension between rising US yields and the ECB’s own more cautious tone. In crypto, Ethereum at $1,753 remains firmly in Extreme Fear near multi-month lows, while Litecoin at $43.15 has found more constructive support from a newly launched spot ETF.
In FX, EUR/USD’s fate this week hinges on Thursday’s ECB Accounts — a hawkish-leaning account would extend the pair’s recovery toward 1.16–1.17, while a dovish-leaning confirmation of Lagarde’s Sintra tone would likely cap gains ahead of the 23 July decision. GBP/USD should continue trading primarily as a broad-dollar proxy this week, with UK political headlines the key wildcard given the still-unresolved Labour leadership transition. In commodities, silver’s bounce is a genuine test of Wednesday’s FOMC minutes, while wheat’s rally should fade as harvest progress and Black Sea supply reassert themselves absent a strong export-demand surprise. The FTSE 100’s defensive-led rally is the week’s most consequential equity setup — a confirmed bounce-continuation trade with a clear path toward fresh record highs if global rate expectations continue to soften. German Bund yields remain a genuine two-way trade pending Thursday’s ECB Accounts. In crypto, Ethereum remains a fade-the-bounce trade within a structurally bearish cycle, while Litecoin’s ETF-driven demand offers a more constructive, if still cautious, accumulation opportunity.
CSFX’s highest-conviction setups for the week are: buying the FTSE 100 on a confirmed dip toward 10,500 (the cleanest structural trade given the ongoing defensive rotation), buying silver on dips toward $58.50 into Wednesday’s FOMC minutes, and buying EUR/USD on dips toward 1.1350 ahead of Thursday’s ECB Accounts. GBP/USD is a range trade between 1.3250 and 1.3550 given genuinely two-sided political risk; wheat is a fade of rallies toward $6.15 given ample global supply; the Germany 10Y Bund yield is a fade of the rise toward 3.05% on expectations of a dovish ECB Accounts release; Ethereum is a fade of bounces toward $1,850 within its structurally bearish trend; and Litecoin is a $38.00 accumulation play tied to continued ETF inflows. CSFX will issue intra-week alerts if Thursday’s ECB Accounts deliver a material surprise in either direction, if UK political headlines escalate around the Labour leadership transition, if Wednesday’s FOMC minutes reveal a materially hawkish or dovish shift, or if Litecoin ETF flow data shows a sharp reversal. Follow all updates at capitalstreetfx.com.
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