Europe Flatlines as Iran Deal | Technical Analysis – European Session | Capital Street FX Daily Brief · 21 May 2026
Europe Flatlines as Iran Deal Hopes
Cool Oil & a Surging Dollar Squeezes EUR/USD
Gold $4,535 · Brent $105.20 · BTC $77,819 · NVDA EPS $1.87 Beat
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European markets opened Thursday softer across the board, with the pan-European Stoxx 600 slipping 0.2%, the DAX down 0.2%, the FTSE 100 falling 0.44%, and the CAC 40 mostly flat. The mood is not one of fear — it is one of exhausted digestion. Nvidia’s Q1 FY2027 results, released after the US close on Wednesday, were a clean beat: $81.6 billion in revenue (consensus $78B), EPS of $1.87 (consensus $1.76), and a fresh $80 billion share buyback. The AI trade is intact. But the read-through to European equities — particularly ASML, Infineon, and STMicroelectronics — is nuanced: strong Nvidia guidance confirms data centre AI capex, but Nvidia’s China H200 restriction overhang means direct European semiconductor exposure is limited.
The dominant macro forces today are: (1) Flash PMI day — S&P Global releases May flash PMIs for Germany, France, the Eurozone, and the UK, with markets expecting further confirmation that services are contracting while manufacturing holds up. (2) Iran peace talks — Brent crude fell more than 5% yesterday on Trump’s comments that the US was in the “final stages” of negotiations with Tehran. Today’s settlement at ~$105 means energy relief is priced partially in, but the Strait of Hormuz remains blocked. (3) Fed hike risk repricing — the US April CPI print at 3.8% and PPI at 4.9% have pushed CME FedWatch probabilities for at least one Fed hike in 2026 to 35.6%. This has strengthened the dollar, weighing on EUR/USD (now at 1.1622, a one-month low) and capping GBP/USD at 1.3481. The ECB June 11 meeting, where an 80%+ probability of a 25bp hike is priced, is increasingly a live event risk for EUR. Buckle in — the flash PMI data at 08:15–09:30 CET will likely be the session’s most significant catalyst.
Market Snapshot
What Moved Markets Overnight
Five stories driving the European session — ranked by market impact
EUR/USD & GBP/USD — Trade Setups
Dollar strength from Fed hike repricing is the dominant theme in both pairs today
Technical Analysis
EUR/USD has broken below the 1.1700 structural level that held for the prior three weeks, confirming a bearish shift in near-term momentum. The daily candlestick structure shows a series of lower highs from the January 2026 peak at 1.2019, and the pair is now testing the mid-point of the year’s range. The 50-day SMA (currently ~1.1680) has now flipped to resistance. RSI on the daily is at 38 — approaching but not yet at oversold levels. A clean break and close below 1.1580 (the April swing low) would open a move toward the 52-week low at 1.1435. The recovery scenario requires a recapture of 1.1700 on a daily close, which would need either a materially dovish PMI surprise or a reversal in the Fed hike narrative.
Fundamental Context
Three dynamics are pressing EUR/USD lower simultaneously. First, US inflation data has repriced Fed policy toward hikes rather than cuts — US CPI 3.8% and PPI 4.9% are not compatible with rate cuts in a 3.50–3.75% Fed funds environment. Second, Eurozone stagflation is worsening: Q1 GDP grew just 0.1%, the weakest since Q2 2025, while April inflation hit 3.0% — the ECB’s worst-case dual mandate scenario. Third, Iran war energy costs fall disproportionately on the Eurozone due to its higher energy import dependency versus the US. The ECB is likely to hike in June (80%+ probability), but this may be a “sell the hike” catalyst as the market prices further economic deterioration. Today’s flash PMI data at 08:15–09:30 CET is the single most important catalyst — a miss would accelerate EUR weakness sharply.
Technical Analysis
GBP/USD is testing the 1.3481 level — the weakest point since 9 April according to currency tracking data. The pair peaked at the 52-week high of 1.3634 three weeks ago and has since entered a corrective phase. The daily structure remains in a broader uptrend (higher lows since March), but the short-term momentum is negative. The 20-day EMA sits around 1.3440–1.3450 — a critical first support. RSI is at 42, approaching oversold territory. A hold above 1.3440 on the daily close would indicate buyers defending the trend. A break below 1.3380 (monthly structure) would open a deeper correction toward 1.3250. The UK flash PMI at 09:30 CET is the key catalyst for sterling today.
Fundamental Context
Sterling is caught in a tug-of-war. The BoE’s hawkish 8-1 vote at the April meeting (Chief Economist Huw Pill voted for an immediate hike to 4.00%) is a structural positive for GBP — BNP Paribas now expects two hikes in 2026. However, three bearish forces are competing: (1) The strengthening dollar from US inflation repricing, which mechanically compresses GBP/USD; (2) UK gilt yields near 4.78%, which signals fiscal stress and discount-rate expansion for UK assets; (3) UK April CPI “underwhelmed” but with major caveats relating to energy passthrough timing — the full impact of Iran war fuel prices hasn’t yet fed through into UK CPI data. The next hard catalyst for sterling is the UK May flash PMI. Watch for services PMI specifically — the UK services sector is 80% of GDP, and a miss here would weigh materially on GBP. Consider leverage carefully around the PMI release.
FTSE 100 & DAX 40 — Trade Setups
Both indices are digesting Nvidia’s beat against elevated energy costs and gilt/bund volatility
Technical Analysis
The FTSE 100 pulled back from record highs at 10,935 (February 2026) and is currently at 10,345 — still well above the 200-day SMA near 9,665 and the 50-day SMA at approximately 10,100. The medium-term structure remains constructive. Today’s key technical question is whether 10,300 holds as intraday support. A bounce from 10,280 would confirm buyer activity and open a short-term target of 10,520 (the 10-week moving average resistance). RSI at 48 is neutral. MACD on the daily is flat, showing no trend momentum either way. The primary bear case requires a close below 10,150, which would suggest the distribution from the February high is resuming.
Fundamental Context
The FTSE 100 faces a cross-current day. On the negative side: UK 10-year gilt yields near 4.78% are squeezing equity valuations through discount rate expansion, BP and Shell are surrendering recent energy gains on Brent’s 5% drop, and political pressure on PM Starmer is creating UK-specific risk premium. On the positive side: the Nvidia earnings beat is a modest positive for FTSE tech-adjacent holdings (ARM Holdings is a primary beneficiary), HSBC’s China desk is net positive from any Iran deal-related global risk appetite recovery, and the EU-US tariff agreement removes a tail risk for FTSE multinationals with US exposure. The UK May flash PMI at 09:30 CET is today’s key catalyst for the index — a strong services reading would push the FTSE back above 10,400.
Technical Analysis
The DAX 40 opened around 23,740 and is trading near the flatline at 23,940 — within a range of 23,738 to 24,020 intraday. The index is trading below the 52-week high of 25,508 and has been in a declining channel since April. The 50-day SMA (near 24,200) is acting as resistance. The daily RSI is at 44 — neutral but tilted bearish. A break above 24,200 on volume would be a short-term bullish signal. A break below 23,700 would open a move toward the 23,400 support zone (the April 2026 low cluster). Commerzbank’s AGM today, with the UniCredit takeover debate dominating, adds event-specific volatility to the financial sector.
Fundamental Context
The DAX continues to underperform global peers. Germany’s GDP growth has been subdued — the IMF cut its eurozone growth forecast to 1.1% for 2026 and Germany is the weakest performer among G7 economies. The Iran war has created an acute energy cost problem for German industry, which has the highest energy intensity in Europe. SAP dropped 2.5% yesterday after the close — the most recent session data showing the stock as the top DAX laggard — likely on cloud revenue concerns. Siemens Energy (+2.3%), Siemens (+1.7%), and Infineon (+1.1%) provided partial offset. Today, Commerzbank’s annual general meeting will focus on the UniCredit takeover bid, which could create volatility in the financial sector weighting. The Eurozone flash PMI at 08:30 CET will be the broadest read on business conditions and is the most important data point for the DAX today.
BTC/USD — Riding the Nvidia Risk-On Wave
Bitcoin surges 2.72% on Nvidia beat and AI-driven risk appetite recovery
Technical Analysis
Bitcoin has reclaimed $80,000 — a psychologically and technically significant level — on the back of overnight risk appetite improvement driven by Nvidia’s blowout earnings. The daily candlestick is bullish engulfing from the $77,700 area (the May 20 low). RSI has bounced from the 38 area to 52, confirming a momentum shift. The 50-day SMA sits around $79,200 and was reclaimed cleanly, acting as a springboard. Key resistance is at $83,500 (the March 2026 area from which the most recent correction began). A daily close above $81,500 today would suggest sustained momentum toward the $84,500 target. The bear case requires a loss of $79,500 — the short-term support that the current candle structure is now defending.
Fundamental Context
Bitcoin is benefiting from the post-Nvidia risk-on environment. The core narrative is AI infrastructure convergence: Nvidia’s confirmation of ongoing hyperscaler capex at unprecedented levels ($1 trillion projection by Jensen Huang across 2026–2027) is read as macro positive for all risk assets including crypto. BlackRock’s IBIT Bitcoin ETF continues to lead institutional inflows. The global macro backdrop remains mixed for BTC — the rising dollar and Fed hike risk are headwinds (historically strong USD correlates with BTC weakness), but Nvidia’s results suggest the AI boom is not slowing, which keeps risk appetite elevated. The 21 million supply cap narrative is also resurfacing in analyst commentary as global central banks move toward rate increases. Use leverage cautiously on BTC given the elevated intraday range today (typically $3,000–$5,000 moves on high-impact sessions).
“Nvidia delivered $81.6 billion in revenue and confirmed the AI capex supercycle is intact. But European markets can’t price euphoria when gilt yields are at 4.78%, Brent is still above $105, and the ECB faces a June hike decision in a stagflationary environment. The tug of war between AI optimism and energy-driven macro stress defines May 2026.” Capital Street FX Research · European Session Brief · 21 May 2026
Today’s Key Events — 21 May 2026
Flash PMI Day — the most significant session data calendar of May so far
PMI Day Warning: S&P Global flash PMIs for France, Germany, Eurozone composite, and the UK all release in a 75-minute window this morning (08:15–09:30 CET). The last Eurozone composite PMI (April) fell to 48.6 — contraction territory. A miss today could trigger sharp EUR and GBP moves. Position sizes should reflect this volatility risk.
| Time (CET) | Region | Event | Impact | Prev / Forecast | Actual |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 08:15 | 🇫🇷 France | Flash Manufacturing PMI (May) | Medium | 48.7 / 49.2 | Pending |
| 08:15 | 🇫🇷 France | Flash Services PMI (May) | High | 47.4 / 48.0 | Pending |
| 08:30 | 🇩🇪 Germany | Flash Manufacturing PMI (May) | High | 52.2 / 51.8 | Pending |
| 08:30 | 🇩🇪 Germany | Flash Services PMI (May) | High | 49.6 / 49.9 | Pending |
| 09:00 | 🇪🇺 Eurozone | Flash Composite PMI (May) | High | 48.6 / 49.1 | Pending |
| 09:00 | 🇪🇺 Eurozone | Flash Services PMI (May) | High | 47.4 / 48.2 | Pending |
| 09:30 | 🇬🇧 UK | Flash Manufacturing PMI (May) | Medium | 50.3 / 50.1 | Pending |
| 09:30 | 🇬🇧 UK | Flash Services PMI (May) | High | 49.8 / 50.2 | Pending |
| 10:00 | 🇪🇺 Eurozone | Consumer Confidence Flash (May) | Medium | −16.7 / −15.5 | Pending |
| 13:30 | 🇺🇸 US | Initial Jobless Claims | Medium | 228K / 230K | Pending |
| 14:45 | 🇺🇸 US | Flash US Composite PMI (May) | High | 50.6 / 50.4 | Pending |
| 15:00 | 🇺🇸 US | Existing Home Sales (Apr) | Low | 4.02M / 3.96M | Pending |
| All Day | 🇩🇪 Germany | Commerzbank AGM — UniCredit Takeover | High | Event Risk — vote expected | Watch |
The Big Picture — What Drives Europe in May 2026
Energy crisis via the Iran war. Since the US-Israel war against Iran began in late February 2026, Brent crude has surged from ~$72/barrel to a peak of nearly $120 before settling around $105 after yesterday’s Trump ceasefire comments. This represents the largest oil supply shock in modern history — approximately 10.5 million barrels per day of Gulf production are currently offline, creating a global supply deficit of 1.78 million bpd. The IEA’s May 2026 Oil Market Report projects the steepest inventory draws in May and June. For Europe, the math is brutal: higher energy costs = higher inflation, lower consumer demand, lower corporate margins, and lower growth.
ECB stagflation trap. The ECB is in its most uncomfortable position since the 2022 inflation surge. Eurozone composite PMI fell to 48.6 in April — contraction territory — while CPI rose to 3.0%. Core inflation held at 2.2%. GDP grew just 0.1% in Q1 2026. The ECB held rates at 2.00% in April but signaled both a hike and a hold were on the table for June. Markets have concluded: the ECB will hike in June (80%+ probability) but will frame it as a “last hike” — a response to energy-driven inflation, not broad overheating. The risk is that hiking into a contractionary environment accelerates the downturn.
Fed divergence reprices USD upward. The Federal Reserve held at 3.50–3.75% on 29 April in a dramatic 8-4 vote — the most divided FOMC since 1992. US April CPI (3.8%) and PPI (4.9%) have now pushed the probability of at least one Fed hike in 2026 to 35.6% per CME FedWatch. This is a fundamental shift: three months ago markets were pricing Fed cuts. Now they are pricing Fed hikes. The result is a stronger dollar, which mechanically pressures EUR/USD and GBP/USD and compresses European equity valuations for USD-denominated investors.
UK political and fiscal stress. UK gilt yields at 4.78% reflect a dual concern: higher-for-longer BoE rates (after the hawkish April hold) and a deteriorating fiscal backdrop under PM Starmer’s government. BNP Paribas expects two BoE hikes in 2026. Services inflation at 4.5% (March data) is running nearly double the 2% target. The gilt yield level is approaching the zone that created FTSE selling pressure in 2022. For equity traders, watch the 4.90–5.00% level on the 10-year gilt as a potential “danger zone” for valuation compression.
AI supercycle intact — Nvidia confirms. Nvidia’s Q1 FY2027 print of $81.6 billion (+85% YoY) and net income of $58.3 billion (3x prior year) is the clearest possible confirmation that hyperscaler AI capital expenditure is accelerating, not slowing. CEO Jensen Huang’s projection of $1 trillion in Blackwell and Vera Rubin revenue by 2027 is extraordinary. For European equities, the read-through is selective: ASML (extreme ultraviolet lithography machines for chips) is a primary beneficiary; Infineon and STMicroelectronics are secondary beneficiaries. The China H200 restriction overhang (US cleared 10 Chinese firms but zero deliveries have been made) remains an unresolved overhang for the global AI trade.
Capital Street FX View: The May 2026 European session environment is defined by three simultaneous shocks: (1) an energy supply crisis via the Iran war, (2) an AI boom via Nvidia’s confirmation, and (3) a US monetary policy shift toward potential rate hikes. The net result is a market in genuine tension — risk assets want to rally on AI; macro constraints prevent it. In this environment, selectivity and tight risk management via appropriate leverage are paramount.
Most Asked Questions — 21 May 2026
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Session Summary & Positioning Guide
The single biggest risk catalyst for the European session today is the 75-minute PMI window from 08:15 to 09:30 CET. If Eurozone composite PMI beats 49.5, EUR/USD could stabilize and European equities could recover to session highs. If it misses — particularly if the services component falls deeper into contraction — EUR/USD could break 1.1580 with conviction and the DAX could test 23,500.
In FX: EUR/USD has a clear bearish bias with the structural trend pointing lower. Shorts into bounces toward 1.1650 remain the preferred position. GBP/USD is more nuanced — the BoE’s hawkish tilt provides relative support for sterling, making EUR/GBP shorts more attractive than outright GBP/USD shorts. Watch UK services PMI at 09:30 as a primary sterling catalyst.
In equities: The FTSE 100 is weighed by gilt yields and energy giveback but has fundamental support from AI read-through (ARM Holdings) and financials recovery. DAX faces the more challenging environment: SAP underperformance, German economic weakness, and the Commerzbank AGM create specific event risk. Consider tight stops on index positions given the PMI event window.
In crypto: BTC/USD has reclaimed $80,000 cleanly and the Nvidia-driven risk appetite provides a tailwind. The $79,500 level is now key support. Long exposure with a stop below $77,500 targets $84,500. Monitor the dollar index (DXY) through the US session — sustained DXY strength is the primary headwind for any BTC rally.
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