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FTSE 100 edges higher as oil risks keep European markets cautious

by May 11, 2026
by May 11, 2026

European shares were little changed on Monday as stronger economic data from across the region was offset by a rise in oil prices linked to stalled US-Iran peace efforts, leaving investors reluctant to push the market decisively higher.

Britain’s FTSE 100 rose 0.1%, France’s CAC 40 fell 0.5% and Germany’s DAX was broadly flat.

The muted moves reflected a market caught between two competing forces: signs of resilience in the European economy and renewed concern that higher energy costs could reignite inflation and weigh on growth.

Markets mark time

The cautious tone left the broader regional market struggling for direction.

Investors had some reason for optimism after positive economic readings from Europe, but that support was tempered by the prospect that rising oil prices could quickly become a drag on consumer spending, business confidence and monetary policy expectations.

The STOXX 600 was little changed, underlining just how evenly balanced sentiment remained.

While Wall Street had shown stronger momentum, European equities underperformed as investors focused more directly on the region’s vulnerability to energy shocks.

That caution was visible across major national benchmarks.

The FTSE managed a modest gain, helped in part by its heavier weighting towards internationally exposed and commodity-linked names, while the CAC underperformed and the DAX struggled to gain traction.

Oil and geopolitics dominate

The main source of uncertainty remained the geopolitical backdrop.

President Donald Trump rejected Iran’s response to a US proposal as “totally unacceptable”, while Iranian state media said Tehran was seeking an end to conflict across the region, compensation for damage to Iranian targets and sovereignty over key oil shipping routes.

Those developments kept attention fixed on the Strait of Hormuz, a critical artery for global energy flows.

Any disruption there risks sending oil prices higher and adding to the inflation pressures that central banks have spent the past two years trying to contain.

For European investors, that is a serious concern.

The region is highly sensitive to imported energy costs, and any sustained increase in oil prices could complicate the outlook for both growth and inflation.

Even if domestic data is showing signs of improvement, a renewed energy shock could quickly undermine that progress.

Stock movers in focus

With the broader market lacking conviction, stock-specific developments played a bigger role in trading.

British catering group Compass raised its profit forecast, helping support its shares and offering one of the clearer positive corporate stories of the session.

Delivery Hero also edged higher after developments involving a major shareholder stake sale drew investor attention.

Those moves helped offset weakness elsewhere and reinforced the sense that, on a thin and uncertain trading day, company-level news was carrying more weight than the macro backdrop.

That kind of selective trading is typical when markets are struggling to form a unified view.

Investors are willing to back companies with supportive updates, but remain wary of taking broad market exposure while geopolitical risk and energy prices remain unstable.

Why investors are cautious

The underlying issue for markets is not just the latest jump in oil, but what it could mean for policy and earnings.

Stronger energy prices tend to feed directly into headline inflation, which in turn can make central banks more cautious about easing monetary policy.

For equities, that creates a difficult mix.

Higher oil can support some energy-related shares, but it also raises costs for businesses and households, potentially squeezing margins and weakening demand.

That tension helps explain why European stocks have largely been treading water rather than building on encouraging economic signals.

For now, investors appear content to wait for more clarity on both the geopolitical front and the inflation outlook.

Until there is firmer evidence that energy markets are stabilising, or that stronger European data can outweigh the oil shock, the region’s main stock indices may continue to trade without a clear direction.

The post FTSE 100 edges higher as oil risks keep European markets cautious appeared first on Invezz

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