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European shares gain as tech stocks rebound; Middle East in focus

By Thomson Reuters Jul 9, 2026 | 2:24 AM

By Tharuniyaa Lakshmi and Johann M Cherian

July 9 (Reuters) – European shares rose in choppy trading on Thursday, led by a rebound in technology stocks, while investors mulled the outlook for the conflict in the Middle East after U.S. President ​Donald Trump said that Iran wanted to “make a deal”.

The pan-European STOXX 600 index ‌was up 0.5% at 639.12 points by 0816 GMT, with the technology sector and basic resources among the top sectoral gainers, up 1.8% and 2.8%, respectively.

Chip stocks such as Siltronic jumped 10.5%, while Soitec added 4.5% and ASML rose 2.6%.

The group had taken a breather after logging its strongest quarterly performance since 2001 ‌in ​June, and Thursday’s gains signalled investor concerns about elevated valuations ⁠are likely to take a back ⁠seat temporarily.

The sector is the worst performer on the benchmark index so far this month.

Global sentiment was also buoyed by a report that China could allow domestic AI firms limited access to AI leader Nvidia’s H200 chips, suggesting demand for AI infrastructure ​could get a further boost.

Meanwhile, crude oil prices, a key resource for energy-deficient Europe, were marginally lower as investors weighed Trump’s latest comments on the war.

The U.S. had launched fresh ⁠strikes on Iran after Trump said the deal ⁠with Tehran was over on Wednesday, and worries about repercussions on the ​economy dragged the STOXX to log its biggest one-day drop since March.

“Positive developments around the AI ​trade are supporting sentiment, but it’s not simply a case of AI ‌outweighing concerns over U.S.-Iran tensions. Investors have also become a little more immune to developments in that story, viewing them as part of what has always been a choppy path towards a broader agreement,” said Fiona Cincotta, senior market analyst at City Index.

Spanish stocks outperformed the ⁠region, up 1.1%, rebounding from Wednesday’s three-week low after Trump said Spain was “very generous” following his order to halt trade with the country over its NATO contribution.

Meanwhile, healthcare was the worst performing ⁠sector, down 1.5%, led by ‌a 9.1% drop in AstraZeneca after the drugmaker’s nerve disease drug ⁠Wainua, made in partnership with U.S.-based Ionis, failed to meet the ​main goal ‌of reducing cardiovascular deaths and recurring heart problems in a ​late-stage trial.

Among others, ⁠IT services provider Computacenter jumped 11.1% after saying it expects full-year results to exceed market expectations, helped by strong demand for AI-related infrastructure.

Onshore wind turbine manufacturer Nordex added 5% after saying its project orders in the second quarter rose year-on-year to 3,054 MW megawatts, boosted by significant orders from the U.S.

(Reporting by Tharuniyaa Lakshmi and Johann M Cherian in Bengaluru; Editing by Rashmi ​Aich and Sonia Cheema)