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Morning Bid: Samsung boom, market gloom

By Thomson Reuters Jul 6, 2026 | 11:38 PM

A look at the day ahead in European and global markets from Satoshi Sugiyama.

South Korea’s Samsung Electronics came out with a bang, forecasting an eye-popping ​19-fold jump in second-quarter operating profit from a ‌year earlier and topping its combined earnings over the past three years.

Yet investors still found reason to flinch: Samsung shares shed more than 8%, while South Korea’s benchmark index dropped 6.7%, as traders questioned whether ‌the ​AI demand fuelling those bumper earnings ⁠can keep delivering. Taking ⁠cues from South Korea, MSCI’s broadest index of Asia-Pacific shares outside Japan lost 1.7%.

The moves offer a cautionary tale of the volatility coursing through equity markets as the ​AI trade broadens beyond semiconductors and chip-equipment makers to energy groups, copper miners and lithium suppliers.

“Investors still want to ⁠be exposed, but they are ⁠very nervous about valuations,” said Michael McCarthy, market ​strategist at Moomoo Australia.

In early European futures, pan-region Euro Stoxx ​50 futures were down 0.34%, German DAX futures slipped ‌0.3% and FTSE futures were 0.15% higher. The S&P 500 e-minis were up 0.07%.

U.S. President Donald Trump will be in Turkey to attend a NATO leaders summit. Ahead of his ⁠arrival, European government leaders are planning to unveil arms deals worth tens of billions of dollars, showcasing their stepped-up commitment to ⁠regional defence.

In currencies, ‌the yen gained 0.15% against the greenback ⁠to 161.83 per dollar, pulling back from the ​weaker ‌side of 162, with traders still on ​guard for ⁠official intervention.

Key developments that could influence markets on Tuesday:

– Bank of England releases financial stability report

– German industrial output for May

– British Halifax housing data for June

– Canadian leading index for June, trade balance for May

– U.S. trade data for May

(Editing ​by Kate Mayberry)