Iran Standoff & ECB On The Edge | Technical Analysis – Europe Session | Capital Street FX Daily Brief · 22 May 2026
PMI Collapse, Iran Standoff
& ECB On The Edge
Gold $4,530 · WTI $101.20 · ECB Deposit Rate 2.00% · BoE Rate 3.75%
Full Trade Ideas · Technical Charts · Economic Calendar · Macro Fundamentals · FAQ
Friday’s European session arrives under a cloud of deteriorating PMI data, an unresolved Iran conflict, and a central bank crossroads — with both the ECB and BoE facing stagflationary traps as diverging asset classes tell contradictory stories.
This morning’s S&P Global flash PMI readings delivered a significant shock. The Eurozone Composite PMI fell to 47.5 in May from 48.8 in April — a 31-month low, marking the second consecutive monthly contraction and the sharpest pace of decline since October 2023. Services collapsed to 46.4, the weakest reading since early 2021, crushed by energy-driven cost surges from the ongoing Middle East conflict. Meanwhile, UK flash PMI data showed the British economy also contracted in May, with the Services PMI plunging to 47.9 from 52.7 — the first contraction since April 2025.
The Iran war backdrop remains the single dominant macro force. A fragile ceasefire between the U.S.-Israel coalition and Iran remains technically in place, but diplomatic progress has stalled. Iran’s Supreme Leader has reportedly ordered Iran’s enriched uranium to remain on Iranian soil, directly contradicting Israeli demands, while Tehran is said to be restoring military capacity faster than anticipated. Oil prices, while pulling back from four-year highs on brief deal optimism, remain near $98–105 as traders price in a prolonged partial Hormuz disruption. Gold, which had surged to $5,595 as a safe-haven peak, has corrected sharply to around $4,530 on reports the conflict may be nearing a diplomatic phase — but bulls are not walking away.
The macro picture in Europe is one of classic stagflation: output contracting while input price inflation surges. The ECB held rates at 2.00% in April but markets now price over 80% probability of a 25bp hike at the 11 June meeting. The BoE, holding at 3.75%, is in a similar bind — UK April CPI printed at 2.8%, below the 3.0% forecast, but the BoE warned inflation could rise “somewhat further” in Q4 as energy costs pass through.
Today’s key catalysts include the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment reading from the US (later in the NY session), while European markets are digesting this morning’s PMI shocks in real time. Equity indices are rising despite the dire PMI data — a paradox driven by deal-hope oil relief and the relative improvement narrative.
European Session Market Snapshot
Key price levels as of the European open — 22 May 2026
Top Stories Driving the European Session
Ranked by market-moving impact
The Big Picture — Stagflation vs. Relief Rally
Two competing narratives are colliding in European markets this Friday
The fundamental backdrop for European markets on 22 May 2026 is defined by a collision of two forces: a stagflationary PMI shock that signals the eurozone and UK economies are contracting simultaneously while inflation surges, and a nascent Iran deal narrative that is lifting risk appetite and pulling oil modestly off four-year highs.
The Iran war, which began in late February 2026, has caused the largest global oil supply disruption on record according to the IEA. The partial closure of the Strait of Hormuz — through which approximately 20% of global oil trade passes — sent Brent crude from $80 to $120 at its March peak. While prices have since moderated to around $105, they remain at levels that are feeding directly into European input costs, transportation, and consumer energy bills. The S&P Global PMI surveys note that input cost inflation reached a 46-month high in May, and output price inflation is at a 39-month high.
The ECB faces the sharpest policy dilemma in a decade. Having cut rates eight times from June 2024 through June 2025 and landing at 2.00%, the central bank now faces inflation re-accelerating toward 4% (S&P Global’s own projection) while the economy contracts. The April decision to hold was described by Lagarde as a “pause” — and the June 11 meeting is now the most consequential ECB event in years. A hawkish hike could push EUR/USD toward 1.19 within hours. A surprise hold could pull it back to 1.15.
The Bank of England, holding at 3.75%, is in a slightly different position. UK April CPI printed at 2.8% — below the 3.0% consensus and the March reading of 3.3% — but the BoE’s own projections warn inflation will “rise somewhat further” in Q4 as energy costs fully pass through. The UK labour market has also deteriorated: employment dropped 100,000 — the worst monthly fall since 2020 — though wages held at 4.1%, keeping second-round effects alive.
University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment (US, ~14:00 CET) is the session’s late catalyst. Any weaker-than-expected print adds to global recession fears, pressuring GBP and EUR further against USD. A strong print reinforces USD strength, keeping EUR/USD below 1.16. Both scenarios are bearish for Cable unless supported by a surprise Iran ceasefire announcement.
Today’s Key Data Releases
All times in CET · Actual readings updated as released
| Time (CET) | Country | Event | Impact | Forecast | Actual |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 09:15 | 🇫🇷France | Flash Manufacturing PMI (May) | Medium | 51.0 | Contracted |
| 09:15 | 🇫🇷France | Flash Services PMI (May) | High | 47.8 | Deeper Miss |
| 09:30 | 🇩🇪Germany | Flash Manufacturing PMI (May) | High | 51.9 | 51.4 ↓ Miss |
| 09:30 | 🇩🇪Germany | Flash Services PMI (May) | High | 47.7 | 46.4 ↓ 5yr Low |
| 10:00 | 🇪🇺Eurozone | Flash Composite PMI (May) | High | 48.8 | 47.5 ↓ 31mo Low |
| 10:30 | 🇬🇧UK | Flash Manufacturing PMI (May) | Medium | 53.0 | 53.7 ✓ Beat |
| 10:30 | 🇬🇧UK | Flash Services PMI (May) | High | 51.7 | 47.9 ↓ Shock Miss |
| 10:30 | 🇬🇧UK | Flash Composite PMI (May) | High | 51.6 | Contraction |
| 16:00 | 🇺🇸US | UMich Consumer Sentiment (May Final) | High | 48.2 | Pending |
| 16:00 | 🇺🇸US | UMich 1-Year Inflation Expectations | High | 6.5% | Pending |
EUR/USD & GBP/USD — Trade Setups
Both pairs under pressure from PMI shocks and USD safe-haven bid
Technical Analysis
EUR/USD broke below the 1.1600 handle for the first time since early April following today’s PMI shock, and is struggling to reclaim it. The key structural support now sits at 1.1580 — a level that held in early April and coincides with a horizontal cluster. A 4H close below 1.1580 opens 1.1495 and potentially the 1.1400 option expiry zone where $751m notional sits (per DTCC data for today’s NY cut). Daily RSI is at 38 — oversold territory approaching but not yet extreme. The 50-day SMA at approximately 1.1680 is now firm resistance. A recovery above 1.1700 would invalidate the bearish thesis.
Fundamental Context
The EUR is caught in a classic stagflation trap. Today’s Composite PMI of 47.5 — a 31-month low — confirms that the eurozone economy contracted for the second consecutive month in May. Services PMI at 46.4 is the weakest since early 2021. S&P Global projects this data is consistent with a 0.2% GDP contraction in Q2. At the same time, input cost inflation hit a 46-month high. The ECB, which held at 2.00% in April, must now decide whether to hike into a recession to fight energy-driven inflation. Markets price an 80%+ probability of a June hike — but that hike may do little to reduce energy-imported inflation while deepening the growth slowdown. EUR/GBP option expiries at 1.1175 ($2.1bn), 1.1315 ($1bn) and 1.1400 ($751m) for today’s NY cut act as potential gravitational zones. Use leverage conservatively given event risk.
Technical Analysis
GBP/USD has been in a descending structure since the 52-week high of 1.3634 set in early May. Today’s Services PMI shock — 47.9 vs 51.7 expected, the sharpest contraction since early 2021 — has accelerated the decline. The pair broke below the critical 1.3480 support zone on the data release and is currently testing 1.3430. The next significant support is 1.3395 (today’s option expiry level with £456m, per DTCC) and then 1.3380 (March consolidation support). RSI on the daily is approaching oversold at 35. Key resistance now at 1.3480 (flipped support-to-resistance) and the 20-day EMA at approximately 1.3530.
Fundamental Context
Cable is in a difficult fundamental position. The BoE is holding at 3.75% with an 86% probability of no change at the June 18 meeting. UK April CPI cooled to 2.8% — below the 3.0% forecast — but the BoE explicitly warned this relief is temporary, projecting inflation to rise “somewhat further” in Q4 as energy costs from the Hormuz disruption fully feed through. Today’s Services PMI shock — the worst since early 2021 — shows the war’s demand-destruction is now landing in earnest. The UK labour market shed 100,000 jobs in April, the worst since 2020. GBP lacks the rate-hike premium narrative that briefly supported it in late April, and with US data holding relatively firmer, the dollar continues to strengthen. A surprise Iran ceasefire announcement is the primary upside risk for Cable — it would reduce energy pressure and could spark a 100–150 pip recovery.
FTSE 100 · DAX 40 · CAC 40 — Trade Ideas
Indices rising despite PMI shock — Iran deal optimism and earnings support dominate
Technical Analysis
The FTSE 100 is the weakest performer among the three major European indices today (+0.29% vs DAX +1.32%) — which is structurally telling. The index’s heavy energy weighting means it is the most directly affected by oil price moves in both directions. As Brent crude pulls back from highs on Iran deal hopes, the energy sector’s contribution fades. The index is consolidating just above the 10,400 support zone. A break above 10,520 would target the 10,700 resistance area. The 50-day SMA is rising at approximately 10,250 and providing solid dynamic support. RSI at 52 is neutral. The bearish case requires a break below 10,280 on a daily close.
Fundamental Context
The FTSE’s mixed performance reflects its unique composition. BP and Shell (combined ~18% of the index) are receiving less support as Brent dips toward $105 from recent highs above $108. Financial giant HSBC is sensitive to China/Hong Kong macro — the Hang Seng fell 2% overnight. The UK Services PMI shock at 47.9 is domestically negative. On the positive side, 3i Group surged 2.31% on deal activity. UniCredit’s record quarterly earnings (€3.2bn, +16% YoY vs €2.8bn expected) provide positive read-through to European financial confidence. Access FTSE 100 CFDs at Capital Street FX with competitive spreads.
Technical Analysis
The DAX 40 is the clear European outperformer today, surging +1.32% to 24,456 — a significant recovery from the 22,100–22,750 range that trapped the index through April. The breakout above 23,500 in the past week has now extended to test the 24,800 resistance zone. Deutsche Post’s 3.61% surge (led by logistics earnings and Hormuz route normalisation hopes) drove index gains disproportionately. RSI on the daily is approaching 62 — not yet overbought but confirming momentum. The key question is whether the 24,800 level, which was a prior breakout high, can be cleared on a daily close. If so, 25,200 comes into view. Support on pullback sits at 24,100 (prior resistance flipped support).
Fundamental Context
The paradox of the DAX is that Germany’s economic data is among the worst in Europe (May ZEW at -10.2; German services PMI well below 50) yet the index is rallying strongly. The explanation lies in the DAX’s sectoral composition: Rheinmetall and the German defence complex are thriving as European nations accelerate rearmament spending under NATO 2% GDP commitments. Deutsche Post benefits from any signal of Hormuz traffic restoration. Industrial stocks front-running a post-conflict recovery are leading. UniCredit’s record profit also provides positive financial sector sentiment, though Commerzbank’s contested takeover bid adds complexity. Germany’s broader stagflation challenge — the Economics Ministry cut 2026 GDP growth to 0.5% — remains a structural headwind, but for today, momentum is firmly bullish. Use DAX leverage carefully given the sharp intraday moves.
Technical Analysis
The CAC 40 is trading at 8,179, comfortably above its previous close of 8,103 and within the day range of 8,089–8,191. The index is in a strong recovery from its recent corrective lows near 7,750. The 8,100 level — prior resistance — has now been converted into support. The next resistance zone is 8,350 (the April corrective high), with the all-time high at 8,642 providing a longer-term target. Daily RSI is at 58, with room to extend before reaching overbought conditions. The key downside risk is a daily close below 8,050 which would invalidate the recovery structure.
Fundamental Context
The CAC is benefiting from a combination of sector-specific catalysts. STMicroelectronics surging 3.43% on AI semiconductor demand provides a technology lift. French luxury stocks (LVMH, Hermès, Kering) are benefiting from early China consumer sentiment improvement as the Iran deal narrative reduces global recession fears. TotalEnergies offers defensive income in an elevated oil environment. The French services PMI remained in contraction territory in May, but the CAC’s multinational composition means it is less exposed to pure domestic French demand than the headline PMI suggests. Political uncertainty (domestic French politics) remains a background risk but has not been a market driver this week. Trade CAC 40 CFDs at Capital Street FX.
Gold XAU/USD — Deal Optimism vs. Structural Bull
Technical Analysis
Gold has corrected sharply from its all-time high of $5,595 (late 2025), entering a consolidation range between approximately $4,380–$4,780 through Q1–Q2 2026. Today’s move to $4,530 represents a 2.44% decline driven by brief Iran deal optimism sparking safe-haven unwind. However, the 50-day SMA — now rising at approximately $4,440 — is providing dynamic support, and the Khamenei uranium directive has already partially reversed the decline. RSI at 44 is approaching the mid-range. A bounce from the $4,440–$4,470 zone would represent a textbook test of the rising 50-day SMA. A break below $4,380 on a daily close would open the $4,200 structural support.
Fundamental Context
Three forces are shaping gold today. Bearish short-term: Iran deal optimism reducing safe-haven demand; USD strengthening on hawkish Fed minutes (which signalled a rate hike could still be warranted); India raising gold import duties; and the PMI-driven contraction narrative reducing “inflationary expectations” hedges. Bullish medium-term: Iran’s Supreme Leader directive has now partially reversed the deal optimism; structural central bank buying remains at 585 tonnes/quarter in 2026; the Iran war’s disruption of global supply chains is inherently stagflationary and gold performs well in stagflation; and JPMorgan maintains its $5,000/oz Q4 2026 target. The net picture is a $4,380–$4,780 consolidation range with upside break potential if Hormuz remains disrupted and central banks continue accumulating gold as a dollar-alternative reserve asset — a multi-year policy shift that is independent of daily news flow. Trade Gold at Capital Street FX.
Frequently Asked Questions
Session Summary — 22 May 2026
Today’s European session is defined by a fundamental contradiction: the macro data is unambiguously negative — Eurozone Composite PMI at 47.5 signals the second consecutive monthly contraction, UK Services PMI collapsed to 47.9 — yet equity indices are rising as Iran deal optimism and individual earnings stories dominate short-term price action.
The divergence between economic reality and market price is a warning sign for traders: rallies driven by geopolitical narrative rather than fundamentals are fragile. Any setback in Iran negotiations — as demonstrated by the Khamenei uranium directive today — can unwind optimism rapidly. Keep positions sized with appropriate stops.
Key positions for the session: Short EUR/USD near 1.1640 targeting 1.1495, stop 1.1700. Short GBP/USD near 1.3480 targeting 1.3330, stop 1.3545. Long DAX on pullbacks to 24,200 targeting 24,900. Long Gold dips to 4,470 targeting 4,650. The 16:00 CET UMich print is the remaining session catalyst — watch for USD volatility. Next week’s focal events: ECB speaks (Tue/Wed), BoE speakers, US PCE data (Fri), and further Iran war developments.
Open a Live AccountPMI Collapse, Iran Standoff
& ECB On The Edge
Gold $4,530 · WTI $101.20 · ECB Deposit Rate 2.00% · BoE Rate 3.75%
Full Trade Ideas · Technical Charts · Economic Calendar · Macro Fundamentals · FAQ
Friday’s European session arrives under a cloud of deteriorating PMI data, an unresolved Iran conflict, and a central bank crossroads — with both the ECB and BoE facing stagflationary traps as diverging asset classes tell contradictory stories.
This morning’s S&P Global flash PMI readings delivered a significant shock. The Eurozone Composite PMI fell to 47.5 in May from 48.8 in April — a 31-month low, marking the second consecutive monthly contraction and the sharpest pace of decline since October 2023. Services collapsed to 46.4, the weakest reading since early 2021, crushed by energy-driven cost surges from the ongoing Middle East conflict. Meanwhile, UK flash PMI data showed the British economy also contracted in May, with the Services PMI plunging to 47.9 from 52.7 — the first contraction since April 2025.
The Iran war backdrop remains the single dominant macro force. A fragile ceasefire between the U.S.-Israel coalition and Iran remains technically in place, but diplomatic progress has stalled. Iran’s Supreme Leader has reportedly ordered Iran’s enriched uranium to remain on Iranian soil, directly contradicting Israeli demands, while Tehran is said to be restoring military capacity faster than anticipated. Oil prices, while pulling back from four-year highs on brief deal optimism, remain near $98–105 as traders price in a prolonged partial Hormuz disruption. Gold, which had surged to $5,595 as a safe-haven peak, has corrected sharply to around $4,530 on reports the conflict may be nearing a diplomatic phase — but bulls are not walking away.
The macro picture in Europe is one of classic stagflation: output contracting while input price inflation surges. The ECB held rates at 2.00% in April but markets now price over 80% probability of a 25bp hike at the 11 June meeting. The BoE, holding at 3.75%, is in a similar bind — UK April CPI printed at 2.8%, below the 3.0% forecast, but the BoE warned inflation could rise “somewhat further” in Q4 as energy costs pass through.
Today’s key catalysts include the University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment reading from the US (later in the NY session), while European markets are digesting this morning’s PMI shocks in real time. Equity indices are rising despite the dire PMI data — a paradox driven by deal-hope oil relief and the relative improvement narrative.
European Session Market Snapshot
Key price levels as of the European open — 22 May 2026
Top Stories Driving the European Session
Ranked by market-moving impact
The Big Picture — Stagflation vs. Relief Rally
Two competing narratives are colliding in European markets this Friday
The fundamental backdrop for European markets on 22 May 2026 is defined by a collision of two forces: a stagflationary PMI shock that signals the eurozone and UK economies are contracting simultaneously while inflation surges, and a nascent Iran deal narrative that is lifting risk appetite and pulling oil modestly off four-year highs.
The Iran war, which began in late February 2026, has caused the largest global oil supply disruption on record according to the IEA. The partial closure of the Strait of Hormuz — through which approximately 20% of global oil trade passes — sent Brent crude from $80 to $120 at its March peak. While prices have since moderated to around $105, they remain at levels that are feeding directly into European input costs, transportation, and consumer energy bills. The S&P Global PMI surveys note that input cost inflation reached a 46-month high in May, and output price inflation is at a 39-month high.
The ECB faces the sharpest policy dilemma in a decade. Having cut rates eight times from June 2024 through June 2025 and landing at 2.00%, the central bank now faces inflation re-accelerating toward 4% (S&P Global’s own projection) while the economy contracts. The April decision to hold was described by Lagarde as a “pause” — and the June 11 meeting is now the most consequential ECB event in years. A hawkish hike could push EUR/USD toward 1.19 within hours. A surprise hold could pull it back to 1.15.
The Bank of England, holding at 3.75%, is in a slightly different position. UK April CPI printed at 2.8% — below the 3.0% consensus and the March reading of 3.3% — but the BoE’s own projections warn inflation will “rise somewhat further” in Q4 as energy costs fully pass through. The UK labour market has also deteriorated: employment dropped 100,000 — the worst monthly fall since 2020 — though wages held at 4.1%, keeping second-round effects alive.
University of Michigan Consumer Sentiment (US, ~14:00 CET) is the session’s late catalyst. Any weaker-than-expected print adds to global recession fears, pressuring GBP and EUR further against USD. A strong print reinforces USD strength, keeping EUR/USD below 1.16. Both scenarios are bearish for Cable unless supported by a surprise Iran ceasefire announcement.
Today’s Key Data Releases
All times in CET · Actual readings updated as released
| Time (CET) | Country | Event | Impact | Forecast | Actual |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 09:15 | 🇫🇷France | Flash Manufacturing PMI (May) | Medium | 51.0 | Contracted |
| 09:15 | 🇫🇷France | Flash Services PMI (May) | High | 47.8 | Deeper Miss |
| 09:30 | 🇩🇪Germany | Flash Manufacturing PMI (May) | High | 51.9 | 51.4 ↓ Miss |
| 09:30 | 🇩🇪Germany | Flash Services PMI (May) | High | 47.7 | 46.4 ↓ 5yr Low |
| 10:00 | 🇪🇺Eurozone | Flash Composite PMI (May) | High | 48.8 | 47.5 ↓ 31mo Low |
| 10:30 | 🇬🇧UK | Flash Manufacturing PMI (May) | Medium | 53.0 | 53.7 ✓ Beat |
| 10:30 | 🇬🇧UK | Flash Services PMI (May) | High | 51.7 | 47.9 ↓ Shock Miss |
| 10:30 | 🇬🇧UK | Flash Composite PMI (May) | High | 51.6 | Contraction |
| 16:00 | 🇺🇸US | UMich Consumer Sentiment (May Final) | High | 48.2 | Pending |
| 16:00 | 🇺🇸US | UMich 1-Year Inflation Expectations | High | 6.5% | Pending |
EUR/USD & GBP/USD — Trade Setups
Both pairs under pressure from PMI shocks and USD safe-haven bid
Technical Analysis
EUR/USD broke below the 1.1600 handle for the first time since early April following today’s PMI shock, and is struggling to reclaim it. The key structural support now sits at 1.1580 — a level that held in early April and coincides with a horizontal cluster. A 4H close below 1.1580 opens 1.1495 and potentially the 1.1400 option expiry zone where $751m notional sits (per DTCC data for today’s NY cut). Daily RSI is at 38 — oversold territory approaching but not yet extreme. The 50-day SMA at approximately 1.1680 is now firm resistance. A recovery above 1.1700 would invalidate the bearish thesis.
Fundamental Context
The EUR is caught in a classic stagflation trap. Today’s Composite PMI of 47.5 — a 31-month low — confirms that the eurozone economy contracted for the second consecutive month in May. Services PMI at 46.4 is the weakest since early 2021. S&P Global projects this data is consistent with a 0.2% GDP contraction in Q2. At the same time, input cost inflation hit a 46-month high. The ECB, which held at 2.00% in April, must now decide whether to hike into a recession to fight energy-driven inflation. Markets price an 80%+ probability of a June hike — but that hike may do little to reduce energy-imported inflation while deepening the growth slowdown. EUR/GBP option expiries at 1.1175 ($2.1bn), 1.1315 ($1bn) and 1.1400 ($751m) for today’s NY cut act as potential gravitational zones. Use leverage conservatively given event risk.
Technical Analysis
GBP/USD has been in a descending structure since the 52-week high of 1.3634 set in early May. Today’s Services PMI shock — 47.9 vs 51.7 expected, the sharpest contraction since early 2021 — has accelerated the decline. The pair broke below the critical 1.3480 support zone on the data release and is currently testing 1.3430. The next significant support is 1.3395 (today’s option expiry level with £456m, per DTCC) and then 1.3380 (March consolidation support). RSI on the daily is approaching oversold at 35. Key resistance now at 1.3480 (flipped support-to-resistance) and the 20-day EMA at approximately 1.3530.
Fundamental Context
Cable is in a difficult fundamental position. The BoE is holding at 3.75% with an 86% probability of no change at the June 18 meeting. UK April CPI cooled to 2.8% — below the 3.0% forecast — but the BoE explicitly warned this relief is temporary, projecting inflation to rise “somewhat further” in Q4 as energy costs from the Hormuz disruption fully feed through. Today’s Services PMI shock — the worst since early 2021 — shows the war’s demand-destruction is now landing in earnest. The UK labour market shed 100,000 jobs in April, the worst since 2020. GBP lacks the rate-hike premium narrative that briefly supported it in late April, and with US data holding relatively firmer, the dollar continues to strengthen. A surprise Iran ceasefire announcement is the primary upside risk for Cable — it would reduce energy pressure and could spark a 100–150 pip recovery.
FTSE 100 · DAX 40 · CAC 40 — Trade Ideas
Indices rising despite PMI shock — Iran deal optimism and earnings support dominate
Technical Analysis
The FTSE 100 is the weakest performer among the three major European indices today (+0.29% vs DAX +1.32%) — which is structurally telling. The index’s heavy energy weighting means it is the most directly affected by oil price moves in both directions. As Brent crude pulls back from highs on Iran deal hopes, the energy sector’s contribution fades. The index is consolidating just above the 10,400 support zone. A break above 10,520 would target the 10,700 resistance area. The 50-day SMA is rising at approximately 10,250 and providing solid dynamic support. RSI at 52 is neutral. The bearish case requires a break below 10,280 on a daily close.
Fundamental Context
The FTSE’s mixed performance reflects its unique composition. BP and Shell (combined ~18% of the index) are receiving less support as Brent dips toward $105 from recent highs above $108. Financial giant HSBC is sensitive to China/Hong Kong macro — the Hang Seng fell 2% overnight. The UK Services PMI shock at 47.9 is domestically negative. On the positive side, 3i Group surged 2.31% on deal activity. UniCredit’s record quarterly earnings (€3.2bn, +16% YoY vs €2.8bn expected) provide positive read-through to European financial confidence. Access FTSE 100 CFDs at Capital Street FX with competitive spreads.
Technical Analysis
The DAX 40 is the clear European outperformer today, surging +1.32% to 24,456 — a significant recovery from the 22,100–22,750 range that trapped the index through April. The breakout above 23,500 in the past week has now extended to test the 24,800 resistance zone. Deutsche Post’s 3.61% surge (led by logistics earnings and Hormuz route normalisation hopes) drove index gains disproportionately. RSI on the daily is approaching 62 — not yet overbought but confirming momentum. The key question is whether the 24,800 level, which was a prior breakout high, can be cleared on a daily close. If so, 25,200 comes into view. Support on pullback sits at 24,100 (prior resistance flipped support).
Fundamental Context
The paradox of the DAX is that Germany’s economic data is among the worst in Europe (May ZEW at -10.2; German services PMI well below 50) yet the index is rallying strongly. The explanation lies in the DAX’s sectoral composition: Rheinmetall and the German defence complex are thriving as European nations accelerate rearmament spending under NATO 2% GDP commitments. Deutsche Post benefits from any signal of Hormuz traffic restoration. Industrial stocks front-running a post-conflict recovery are leading. UniCredit’s record profit also provides positive financial sector sentiment, though Commerzbank’s contested takeover bid adds complexity. Germany’s broader stagflation challenge — the Economics Ministry cut 2026 GDP growth to 0.5% — remains a structural headwind, but for today, momentum is firmly bullish. Use DAX leverage carefully given the sharp intraday moves.
Technical Analysis
The CAC 40 is trading at 8,179, comfortably above its previous close of 8,103 and within the day range of 8,089–8,191. The index is in a strong recovery from its recent corrective lows near 7,750. The 8,100 level — prior resistance — has now been converted into support. The next resistance zone is 8,350 (the April corrective high), with the all-time high at 8,642 providing a longer-term target. Daily RSI is at 58, with room to extend before reaching overbought conditions. The key downside risk is a daily close below 8,050 which would invalidate the recovery structure.
Fundamental Context
The CAC is benefiting from a combination of sector-specific catalysts. STMicroelectronics surging 3.43% on AI semiconductor demand provides a technology lift. French luxury stocks (LVMH, Hermès, Kering) are benefiting from early China consumer sentiment improvement as the Iran deal narrative reduces global recession fears. TotalEnergies offers defensive income in an elevated oil environment. The French services PMI remained in contraction territory in May, but the CAC’s multinational composition means it is less exposed to pure domestic French demand than the headline PMI suggests. Political uncertainty (domestic French politics) remains a background risk but has not been a market driver this week. Trade CAC 40 CFDs at Capital Street FX.
Gold XAU/USD — Deal Optimism vs. Structural Bull
Technical Analysis
Gold has corrected sharply from its all-time high of $5,595 (late 2025), entering a consolidation range between approximately $4,380–$4,780 through Q1–Q2 2026. Today’s move to $4,530 represents a 2.44% decline driven by brief Iran deal optimism sparking safe-haven unwind. However, the 50-day SMA — now rising at approximately $4,440 — is providing dynamic support, and the Khamenei uranium directive has already partially reversed the decline. RSI at 44 is approaching the mid-range. A bounce from the $4,440–$4,470 zone would represent a textbook test of the rising 50-day SMA. A break below $4,380 on a daily close would open the $4,200 structural support.
Fundamental Context
Three forces are shaping gold today. Bearish short-term: Iran deal optimism reducing safe-haven demand; USD strengthening on hawkish Fed minutes (which signalled a rate hike could still be warranted); India raising gold import duties; and the PMI-driven contraction narrative reducing “inflationary expectations” hedges. Bullish medium-term: Iran’s Supreme Leader directive has now partially reversed the deal optimism; structural central bank buying remains at 585 tonnes/quarter in 2026; the Iran war’s disruption of global supply chains is inherently stagflationary and gold performs well in stagflation; and JPMorgan maintains its $5,000/oz Q4 2026 target. The net picture is a $4,380–$4,780 consolidation range with upside break potential if Hormuz remains disrupted and central banks continue accumulating gold as a dollar-alternative reserve asset — a multi-year policy shift that is independent of daily news flow. Trade Gold at Capital Street FX.
Frequently Asked Questions
Session Summary — 22 May 2026
Today’s European session is defined by a fundamental contradiction: the macro data is unambiguously negative — Eurozone Composite PMI at 47.5 signals the second consecutive monthly contraction, UK Services PMI collapsed to 47.9 — yet equity indices are rising as Iran deal optimism and individual earnings stories dominate short-term price action.
The divergence between economic reality and market price is a warning sign for traders: rallies driven by geopolitical narrative rather than fundamentals are fragile. Any setback in Iran negotiations — as demonstrated by the Khamenei uranium directive today — can unwind optimism rapidly. Keep positions sized with appropriate stops.
Key positions for the session: Short EUR/USD near 1.1640 targeting 1.1495, stop 1.1700. Short GBP/USD near 1.3480 targeting 1.3330, stop 1.3545. Long DAX on pullbacks to 24,200 targeting 24,900. Long Gold dips to 4,470 targeting 4,650. The 16:00 CET UMich print is the remaining session catalyst — watch for USD volatility. Next week’s focal events: ECB speaks (Tue/Wed), BoE speakers, US PCE data (Fri), and further Iran war developments.
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