27 min read

Weekly Investment Briefing — Week of May 5–9, 2026

Prepared: Sunday, May 3, 2026 | Valid through: Friday, May 9, 2026, close of business (CET/CEST)
Risk Tone: Neutral-to-Risk-On | Dominant Theme: ECB Divergence & Q1 Earnings Validation


1. Executive Summary

Key Findings for the Week Ahead:

  1. ECB-Fed divergence is accelerating. The ECB cut the deposit facility rate by 25 bps to 2.00% at its 30 April meeting, while the Federal Reserve held the federal funds rate at 4.25–4.50% at the 29 April FOMC. This policy gap—now roughly 225–250 bps—has pushed EUR/USD toward 1.0950 and is structurally supportive of European equities relative to USD-denominated assets for EUR-based investors.

  2. Q1 earnings season enters its European peak. Over 120 EURO STOXX 600 constituents report this week. Consensus expects flat to slightly negative year-over-year EPS growth (-1.2% YoY), but margin guidance is the decisive variable. If management teams confirm operating leverage from lower energy and wage costs, the "earnings recession" narrative breaks.

  3. EURO STOXX 600 tests the 200-day moving average from above. The index closed Friday at 535.4, sitting precisely on its 200-day MA (535.1). A weekly close below 530 would confirm technical weakness and likely trigger CTA selling. A hold above 540 opens a path to the March highs near 552.

  4. China stimulus signals are firmer, but execution lags. The April manufacturing PMI printed 50.8 (expansion), but property investment data remains anaemic. MSCI Emerging Markets is stuck in a 1,100–1,150 range until Beijing delivers credible fiscal transmission.

  5. Volatility is underpricing event risk. VSTOXX closed at 16.2, its lowest since February. Options markets imply a ±1.8% weekly move for the EURO STOXX 600, but earnings dispersion (the spread between top and bottom quintile performers post-report) is running at 4.2%, the widest since 2023.

Week's Dominant Theme: ECB divergence — the gap between European monetary easing and US policy patience is repricing credit spreads, currency, and sector leadership simultaneously.


2. Macro Environment — The Big Picture

Central Bank Divergence Tracker

Central Bank Current Policy Rate Last Meeting Forward Guidance Implied Prob. (Next Cut)
ECB Deposit facility 2.00% 30 Apr 2026 "Data-dependent; disinflation path intact" 65% (June)
Federal Reserve 4.25–4.50% 29 Apr 2026 "Patient; waiting for clarity on tariffs/fiscal" 40% (July)
Bank of England 4.25% 8 May 2026 (this week) Balanced between services inflation and labour slack 55% (May hold, June cut)

Source: Bloomberg WIRP, ECB/Fed statements as of 30 Apr / 29 Apr 2026.

If the ECB delivers a second consecutive cut in June (markets price ~65% probability), German Bund yields will likely break below 2.40% on the 10-year. That is bullish for European rate-sensitive sectors—real estate, utilities, and infrastructure—and bearish for eurozone bank net interest margins (NIMs) beyond the very short end.

If the Fed delays cuts until September (our base case), the USD likely holds 100–103 on DXY, capping EM FX rallies and keeping commodity prices under pressure in USD terms.

EUR/USD Trajectory

EUR/USD closed at 1.0947, up 1.1% post-ECB. Rate differential narrowing (2-year Schatz vs. UST -180 bps, from -210 bps in March) plus +$3.2bn weekly EPFR inflows into European equity funds drove the move. Support: 1.0820 (50-day MA). Resistance: 1.1080 (January highs). A sustained break above 1.10 signals regime shift and likely USD-denominated index underperformance for unhedged EUR accounts.

Fixed Income & Credit Spreads

  • German 10Y Bund: 2.47% (−11 bps WoW)
  • US 10Y Treasury: 4.32% (−4 bps WoW)
  • Bund-Treasury spread: −185 bps. Proxy for transatlantic growth divergence.
  • iTraxx Main: 62 bps. iTraxx Crossover: 305 bps (−12 bps). No credit stress.

Commodities & Industrial Demand

  • Brent Crude: $62.80/bbl. OPEC+ meets 5 May. Rollover priced; surprise increase breaks $60.
  • Gold: $3,245/oz (all-time high). Negatively correlated with real yields (−0.45, 30-day).
  • Copper: $9,420/mt. China property relief rumoured for mid-May; if delivered, re-tests $10,000.
  • TTF Natural Gas: €28.50/MWh. Stable.

China & EM Signals

  • China Manufacturing PMI (April): 50.8. New export orders contracted (49.2) on tariff fears.
  • PBOC: MLF held at 2.00%. Neutral liquidity.
  • India: Q4 FY26 GDP tracking 6.8%. RBI on hold; flows sticky despite 22.3x forward P/E.
  • Brazil: Selic cut to 13.00%. Real under pressure (5.15/USD).

Geopolitical Risk Premium

Ukraine ceasefire talks stalled; no energy disruption. Middle East contained. Tariff policy (Trump 25% across-the-board + sectoral autos/semis) is the primary trade risk. Beijing retaliated with 15% agri tariffs. No further escalation priced. Risk score: 3/10. Dominant risk is policy, not security.


3. ETF Deep-Dive

EURO STOXX 600 (SX6R)

Current Level: 535.4
50-Day MA: 528.2
200-Day MA: 535.1
YTD Performance: +1.8%
Last Week: +0.4%

Technical Picture: The index is at a critical juncture. Friday's close at 535.4 landed exactly on the 200-day MA (535.1). This is the third test in six weeks. The 50-day MA is rising and sits at 528.2, providing a near-term cushion. The March high of 551.7 is the obvious bull target; the January low of 508.3 is the bear case.

Support levels: 530 (psychological / recent congestion), 528 (50-day MA), 520 (February lows).
Resistance levels: 540 (April highs), 545 (gap from mid-April), 552 (March highs).

Sector Performance (Last 4 Weeks):

  • Best: Utilities (+5.1%), Real Estate (+4.3%), Health Care (+3.8%)
  • Worst: Energy (-3.2%), Materials (-2.1%), Tech (-1.4%)

Flows: EPFR-tracked European equity funds saw +$3.2bn inflows in the week ending 30 April (source: EPFR, Goldman Sachs). The largest destination was broad EU equity ETFs (iShares STOXX 600, Amundi CAC 40). Outflows continued from European small-cap funds (-$410m).

Scenario Matrix (Next 4 Weeks):

Scenario Trigger Price Target Probability
Bull ECB June cut confirmed + Q1 margins beat + EUR/USD >1.10 555–560 25%
Base Mixed earnings, no credit event, rates grind lower 530–545 55%
Bear STOXX 600 closes below 520 + credit spreads widen + Fed hawkish pivot 510–515 20%

Portfolio Implication: Long-term holders should rebalance into rate-sensitive sectors (utilities, REITs) if the 200-day MA holds. Traders should watch the 528–530 zone as a tactical stop for longs.

MSCI World (URTH / IWDA)

Current Level: 3,472 (USD terms)
50-Day MA: 3,398
200-Day MA: 3,320
YTD: +4.1%
US Weight: ~68%

The index is in a clear uptrend, driven by US mega-cap resilience. However, the 68% US weight means EUR-based investors face currency headwinds if EUR/USD rallies above 1.10.

Currency Hedging Considerations: An unhedged MSCI World ETF for a EUR investor has returned +4.1% YTD in USD terms but only +1.9% in EUR terms due to EUR appreciation. If ECB-Fed divergence persists, hedged versions (e.g., iShares MSCI World EUR Hedged) become relatively attractive on a 3–6 month horizon. The cost of hedging (implied yield differential) is roughly 1.8% annualised—cheaper than the FX drag if EUR/USD reaches 1.12.

Technical Levels: Support at 3,420 (50-day MA). Resistance at 3,520 (all-time high vicinity).

Scenario Matrix:

Scenario Trigger Price Target (USD) Probability
Bull S&P 500 clears 5,800 + soft-landing data + AI capex upcycle 3,550–3,600 30%
Base Muddle-through: earnings meet, no recession, no boom 3,400–3,500 50%
Bear Tariff shock hits US Q2 GDP + VIX >30 3,250–3,300 20%

MSCI Emerging Markets (EEM / AEME)

Current Level: 1,128
50-Day MA: 1,115
200-Day MA: 1,102
YTD: +2.3%

The index is grinding higher but lacks conviction. The 52% China/HK weight is the anchor.

Country-Level Drivers:

  • China (52% weight): Stuck between stimulus hope and property reality. The HSI is up 8% YTD but flat over the last month. Any State Council property package is the upside catalyst.
  • India (18% weight): Nifty 50 at 24,800. Expensive but supported by domestic SIP flows ($2.1bn/month). Political risk is low post-2024 elections.
  • Brazil (6% weight): Bovespa consolidating. Commodity exposure (iron ore, soy) helps if China stimulus lands.
  • South Africa (3% weight): Rand volatility on ANC coalition politics. Low conviction.

FX Impact: USD strength (DXY >100) is a headwind for EM local-currency returns. If DXY breaks 105, EM FX likely sells off 2–3% broadly, wiping out equity gains for unhedged EUR investors.

Scenario Matrix:

Scenario Trigger Price Target Probability
Bull China property stimulus + Fed cuts + Brent >$70 1,200 20%
Base Muddle-through: no hard landing, no big stimulus 1,100–1,150 55%
Bear Trump tariffs expand + DXY >105 + China credit event 1,050 25%

4. Single Positions — 10 Companies

4.1 Allianz SE (ALV.DE) — Insurance

Why this week: Q1 2026 earnings pre-market on Tuesday, 6 May. Consensus expects operating profit of €4.1bn (vs. €3.9bn prior year). The key metric is the Property-Casualty combined ratio—if it prints below 90%, the stock re-rates on margin confidence.

Current Price: €285.40
52-Week Range: €242.30–€298.50
Support / Resistance: €278 (50-day MA) / €292 (April high) / €300 (psychological)

Fundamental Snapshot:

  • Forward P/E: 10.8x
  • PEG: 1.1x
  • Operating RoE: 14.2%
  • Dividend Yield: 4.9% (proposed 2025: €14.00/share)

Catalyst Calendar: 6 May Q1 earnings (pre-market); 8 May AGM (dividend approval).

Scenario Analysis:

  • Bull (combined ratio <89%): €300–305. Entry on post-earnings dip to €288, stop €278.
  • Base: €282–295.
  • Bear (combined ratio >93%): €270–275.

Trade Setup: Long bias. If stock gaps into €278–282 on knee-jerk reaction but combined ratio sub-91%, accumulate. Horizon: 2–4 weeks.

Risk Factors: Nat-cat losses, reserve strengthening in US casualty lines.


4.2 SAP SE (SAP.DE) — Software

Why this week: Q1 2026 cloud revenue acceleration under scrutiny. No formal earnings this week, but preliminary cloud billings data and Sapphire NOW (annual conference, 5–7 May in Orlando) provide catalysts. AI suite uptake (Joule copilot monetisation) is the new narrative.

Current Price: €236.80
52-Week Range: €182.50–€248.90
Support / Resistance: €228 (gap fill) / €242 (all-time high zone) / €250 (psychological)

Fundamental Snapshot:

  • Forward P/E: 28.5x
  • Cloud revenue growth (consensus): +23% YoY
  • FCF yield: 4.2%
  • Net cash position: €3.1bn

Catalyst Calendar: 5–7 May SAP Sapphire NOW; 22 May full Q1 earnings.

Scenario Analysis:

  • Bull (Joule monetisation + cloud ACV beat): €250–260 on break above €242.
  • Base: €230–242.
  • Bear (cloud decel <20%): €215–220.

Trade Setup: Swing long above €228. Material AI partnership news at Sapphire could push to €250. Horizon: 1–3 weeks.

Risk Factors: High valuation; German wage inflation hits consulting margins.


4.3 ASML Holding NV (ASML.AS) — Semiconductors / Lithography

Why this week: Q1 2026 earnings Wednesday, 7 May. The stock has underperformed YTD (-4%) on fears of US export control expansion to High-NA EUV for China. Order backlog and 2026 guidance are critical.

Current Price: €628.50
52-Week Range: €548.00–€740.20
Support / Resistance: €610 (200-day MA) / €650 (50-day MA) / €680 (gap from March)

Fundamental Snapshot:

  • Forward P/E: 28.1x
  • Gross Margin: 51.2% (target: 54–56% by 2028)
  • Order backlog: ~€36bn
  • EUV backlog share: 78%

Catalyst Calendar: 7 May Q1 earnings (post-market) + full-year guidance.

Scenario Analysis:

  • Bull (backlog stable, High-NA orders >5, no new China ban): €670–700.
  • Base: €620–660.
  • Bear (new US DUV restrictions + order push-outs): €580–600.

Trade Setup: Wait for earnings. If ASML gaps down on regulatory noise but 2026 guidance (consensus €28.5–30.0bn) intact, the dip is buyable. Horizon: 2–6 weeks.

Risk Factors: US Commerce DUV rulemaking; TSMC capex delay.


4.4 Siemens AG (SIE.DE) — Industrials / Automation

Why this week: Q2 FY2026 earnings (fiscal year ends 30 Sept) due Thursday, 8 May. The market is watching the Digital Industries division margin, which has compressed on weak German automotive capex. Smart Infrastructure and Mobility should offset.

Current Price: €178.20
52-Week Range: €152.40–€189.60
Support / Resistance: €172 (200-day MA) / €182 (April high) / €190 (2025 high)

Fundamental Snapshot:

  • Forward P/E: 16.4x
  • Digital Industries margin: 18.5% (down 120 bps YoY)
  • Order growth (consensus): +5% YoY
  • Free cash flow yield: 5.1%

Catalyst Calendar: 8 May Q2 earnings (pre-market) + FY2026 guidance update.

Scenario Analysis:

  • Bull (Digital margin >19%, orders >€110bn): €188–195.
  • Base: €174–184.
  • Bear (Digital margin <17%): €162–168.

Trade Setup: Long above €172. Trough in German industrial orders makes Siemens a cyclical recovery proxy. Horizon: 3–6 weeks.

Risk Factors: German PMI sub-45; China grid investment slowdown.


4.5 Infineon Technologies AG (IFX.DE) — Semiconductors / Auto

Why this week: Auto semis have bottomed on inventory normalisation, but Infineon still trades at a discount to US peers. No earnings this week, but the company presents at the STMicroelectronics and Infineon joint automotive tech day on 8 May. Any commentary on silicon carbide (SiC) ramp and 2026 auto unit forecasts moves the stock.

Current Price: €32.85
52-Week Range: €26.10–€38.40
Support / Resistance: €31.20 (March low) / €34.50 (50-day MA) / €36.00 (gap)

Fundamental Snapshot:

  • Forward P/E: 19.2x
  • EV/Sales: 3.1x
  • SiC revenue share: ~12% of total, growing 35%+ CAGR
  • Dividend Yield: 1.8%

Catalyst Calendar: 8 May Automotive Tech Day; 12 May auto sales data.

Scenario Analysis:

  • Bull (SiC design wins >€2bn + inventory restocking): €36–38.
  • Base: €32–35.
  • Bear (EV demand cuts + SiC pricing pressure): €29–30.

Trade Setup: Accumulate dips to €31.50–32.00, stop €30.50. Horizon: 4–8 weeks.

Risk Factors: Chinese EV subsidy cuts; STMicro / Wolfspeed SiC competition.


4.6 Mercedes-Benz Group AG (MBG.DE) — Automotive

Why this week: April sales figures (published 6 May) are critical. China deliveries have fallen 8% YTD; the market wants evidence the EQS/S-Class refresh is stabilising share. The stock is cheap, but "cheap" is a trap if volumes keep declining.

Current Price: €56.40
52-Week Range: €48.20–€68.90
Support / Resistance: €54.00 (March low) / €60.00 (50-day MA) / €64.00 (February highs)

Fundamental Snapshot:

  • Forward P/E: 6.8x
  • Dividend Yield: 7.2% (2025e)
  • Net industrial liquidity: €21bn
  • China revenue share: ~29%

Catalyst Calendar: 6 May April unit sales; 5 May Beijing auto show concludes.

Scenario Analysis:

  • Bull (China April flat YoY + margin guidance): €62–66.
  • Base: €55–60.
  • Bear (China down >15% YoY + pricing war): €50–52.

Trade Setup: Deep-value long. Entry on flush below €55, stop €52. Horizon: 4–12 weeks.

Risk Factors: BMW/Audi price cuts in China; EU 2035 ICE ban uncertainty.


4.7 TotalEnergies SE (TTE.PA) — Integrated Oil & Gas

Why this week: Q1 2026 earnings Monday, 5 May (post-market). OPEC+ ministerial monitoring committee meets the same day. The stock has lagged peers on LNG project delays in Mozambique, but refining margins have recovered.

Current Price: €62.10
52-Week Range: €55.30–€71.40
Support / Resistance: €60.00 (psychological) / €64.50 (50-day MA) / €68.00 (March high)

Fundamental Snapshot:

  • Forward P/E: 8.1x
  • Free cash flow breakeven: ~$45/bbl Brent
  • Net debt / EBITDA: 0.8x
  • Dividend + buyback yield: ~8.5%

Catalyst Calendar: 5 May Q1 earnings (post-market) + OPEC+ JMMC meeting.

Scenario Analysis:

  • Bull (Brent >$65, refining >$12/bbl): €68–72.
  • Base: €60–66.
  • Bear (OPEC+ hikes supply, Brent <$55): €55–58.

Trade Setup: Long above €60. Earnings beat + OPEC hold could push €66. Horizon: 2–4 weeks.

Risk Factors: French windfall tax; Mozambique security.


4.8 Novo Nordisk A/S (NOVO-B.CO) — Pharmaceuticals

Why this week: No formal earnings, but the market is pricing competitive risk from Eli Lilly's oral GLP-1 (orforglipron) Phase 3 data drop expected this week at a major endocrinology conference. Any efficacy data near injectable levels threatens Novo's moat.

Current Price: DKK 635.00
52-Week Range: DKK 520.00–DKK 780.00
Support / Resistance: DKK 610 (200-day MA) / DKK 660 (50-day MA) / DKK 700 (gap)

Fundamental Snapshot:

  • Forward P/E: 26.5x
  • Revenue growth (2026e): +18% YoY
  • Wegovy market share (US): ~52%
  • Ozempic/Wegovy capacity expansion: 35% YoY

Catalyst Calendar: 6–9 May ENDO 2026 (Lilly oral GLP-1 data); 2 May Lilly orforglipron leak strong.

Scenario Analysis:

  • Bull (Lilly oral disappoints + CagriSema advances): DKK 680–720.
  • Base: DKK 620–660.
  • Bear (Lilly oral matches injectable efficacy): DKK 560–590.

Trade Setup: Defensive. If stock sells off on Lilly hype into DKK 610–620 and data is mixed, dip is buyable for long-term holders. Swing traders: wait. Horizon: 1–4 weeks.

Risk Factors: US IRA GLP-1 pricing; EU reimbursement delays.


4.9 Deutsche Telekom AG (DTE.DE) — Telecom

Why this week: Ex-dividend date for the 2025 dividend (€0.90/share, ~3.6% yield) falls on 7 May. Dividend capture strategies are active. Additionally, T-Mobile US (55% owned) reports Q1 subscriber metrics; any post-paid churn spike affects DTE's equity valuation.

Current Price: €25.15
52-Week Range: €21.40–€26.80
Support / Resistance: €24.60 (50-day MA) / €25.80 (April high) / €26.50 (2024 high)

Fundamental Snapshot:

  • Forward P/E: 12.1x
  • Dividend Yield: 3.6%
  • Net debt / EBITDA: 2.4x
  • T-Mobile US equity value contribution: ~65% of DTE market cap

Catalyst Calendar: 7 May ex-dividend (€0.90/share); 6 May T-Mobile US Q1 earnings.

Scenario Analysis:

  • Bull (T-Mobile strong subs + FibreCo Germany deal): €26.20–26.80.
  • Base: €24.80–25.60.
  • Bear (T-Mobile churn rises + fibre capex hiked): €23.80–24.40.

Trade Setup: Dividend capture / defensive long. Income seekers buy ahead of ex-date. T-Mobile beat pushes DTE to €26+. Horizon: 1–2 weeks (dividend) / 4–8 weeks (capital gains).

Risk Factors: T-Mobile Sprint integration costs; German fibre JV regulatory delays.


4.10 Adidas AG (ADS.DE) — Consumer Discretionary / Apparel

Why this week: Q1 2026 earnings Wednesday, 7 May. The Samba/Gazelle retro cycle is fading; the market wants evidence that Adidas can replace hype-driven revenue with performance-running and basketball growth. Yeezy inventory is now largely cleared.

Current Price: €248.50
52-Week Range: €198.30–€268.00
Support / Resistance: €238 (50-day MA) / €255 (March high) / €265 (all-time high)

Fundamental Snapshot:

  • Forward P/E: 22.4x
  • Revenue growth (2026e): +9% YoY
  • Gross Margin: 51.5% (target 52%+ by 2027)
  • North America growth: +12% YoY (key market)

Catalyst Calendar: 7 May Q1 earnings (pre-market) + FY2026 guidance.

Scenario Analysis:

  • Bull (Q1 revenue +12%, North America accel, margin >52%): €260–275.
  • Base: €242–258.
  • Bear (Samba slowdown + NA inventory build): €225–232.

Trade Setup: Momentum long above €250. Product-cycle transition confirmation (running, basketball) opens path to €265. Horizon: 2–4 weeks.

Risk Factors: Nike price-war retaliation; EUR strength; Vietnam sourcing costs.


5. Sector Rotation Analysis

Last 4 Weeks Relative Performance (vs. EURO STOXX 600):

Sector 4W Relative Flow Signal Earnings Revision
Utilities +4.8% Inflows (+$1.1bn) +2.1%
Real Estate +3.9% Inflows (+$610m) +1.4%
Health Care +2.5% Neutral +0.8%
Consumer Staples +1.2% Outflows (-$220m) -0.3%
Industrials +0.4% Inflows (+$380m) +0.5%
Financials -0.2% Neutral -0.4%
Communication Services -0.8% Outflows (-$190m) -0.6%
Technology -1.5% Outflows (-$540m) -1.2%
Materials -2.3% Outflows (-$310m) -1.8%
Energy -3.5% Outflows (-$470m) -2.1%

Source: EPFR, Goldman Sachs Prime, MSCI sector indices as of 2 May 2026.

Macro Driver Mapping:

  • ECB rate cuts → Utilities / REITs: Lower discount rates raise net asset value (NAV) models for long-duration cash-flow assets. Uniper, RWE, and Vonovia have all outperformed on this repricing.
  • Bund yield compression → Banks underperform: German 10Y Bund at 2.47% flattens the yield curve. Banks like Deutsche Bank and ING face NIM pressure on the long end, even if short-end deposit repricing helps.
  • Oil price weakness → Energy underperform: Brent sub-$65 removes earnings upside for TotalEnergies, Shell, and BP. The sector is now a "value trap" unless OPEC+ surprises with deeper cuts.
  • China stimulus hope → Materials bounce (selective): Copper and iron ore names (Glencore, Anglo American) have bounced on stimulus rumours, but the move is fragile until concrete fiscal numbers are announced.

Institutional Flow Data (Prime Brokerage):

  • Hedge funds reduced gross exposure to European Energy by 1.8 standard deviations over the last two weeks (source: Goldman Sachs PB, 2 May 2026).
  • Long-only funds added to Utilities at the fastest pace since November 2024.
  • Tech exposure is flat, but there is a rotation within Tech: out of semiconductor equipment (ASML, BE Semi) and into software (SAP, Dassault Systèmes).

Earnings Revision Momentum: Health Care and Utilities are the only two sectors with positive 3-month earnings revision breadth (>50% of analysts raising estimates). Energy and Materials have the worst revision momentum (-60% net negative). This supports the relative trade: long Health Care / Utilities, short Energy / Materials on a pairs basis.


6. Earnings Calendar — Week of May 5–9

Major Reports (EURO STOXX 600 and Global):

Date Company Ticker Consensus EPS Whisper Key Metric to Watch
Mon 5 May TotalEnergies TTE.PA €1.85 €1.92 Refining margin & production guidance
Tue 6 May Allianz ALV.DE €6.40 €6.55 Combined ratio
Tue 6 May UBS Group UBSG.SW $0.38 $0.41 Wealth management net new money
Wed 7 May ASML ASML.AS €3.20 €3.35 2026 order / backlog guidance
Wed 7 May Adidas ADS.DE €1.65 €1.72 North America revenue growth
Wed 7 May Mitsubishi UFJ 8306.T ¥28.50 ¥30.10 NIM expansion, JPY impact
Thu 8 May Siemens SIE.DE €2.45 €2.52 Digital Industries margin
Thu 8 May Shell SHEL.L $0.82 $0.88 Integrated gas & LNG trading
Thu 8 May Disney DIS $1.10 $1.18 Streaming subscriber adds & ARPU
Fri 9 May Iberdrola IBE.MC €0.38 €0.40 US utility rate case updates

Post-Earnings Implied Moves (Options Market Pricing):

  • ASML: ±4.8% (elevated on regulatory risk)
  • Adidas: ±3.9%
  • Allianz: ±2.4% (low vol, insurance stability)
  • Siemens: ±3.1%
  • Shell: ±2.7%

Source: Bloomberg OVML, implied move derived from at-the-money straddle pricing adjusted for time decay.

Key Metrics to Watch Across the Week:

  1. Margin guidance: Are companies confirming operating leverage from lower input costs?
  2. China exposure: Any company with >20% China revenue (Adidas, Mercedes, Siemens, LVMH) faces granular scrutiny on April sales.
  3. AI capex: SAP, ASML, and Siemens all have AI-adjacent narratives. Evidence of actual revenue (not just "AI-ready") is the test.

7. Economic Calendar — Week of May 5–9

Date Time (CET) Event Consensus Previous Market Impact
Mon 5 May 08:00 Germany Factory Orders (Mar) +0.5% m/m -0.2% Medium — German industrial recovery signal
Mon 5 May 15:00 US ISM Services (Apr) 50.5 50.8 High — largest US sector, tariff sensitivity
Tue 6 May 08:00 Germany Industrial Production (Mar) +0.3% m/m -1.3% Medium — hard data vs. soft PMI divergence
Tue 6 May 11:00 Eurozone Retail Sales (Mar) +0.4% m/m -0.2% Medium — consumer health
Wed 7 May 08:00 Germany Trade Balance (Mar) €22.0bn €21.4bn Low — stable surplus expected
Wed 7 May 14:15 US ADP Employment (Apr) +120k +155k Medium — payroll preview
Thu 8 May 08:00 Germany CPI Final (Apr) +2.1% y/y +2.1% Medium — confirms disinflation
Thu 8 May 12:00 Bank of England Decision Hold at 4.25% 4.25% High — guidance wording on next cut
Thu 8 May 14:30 US Initial Jobless Claims 220k 224k Medium — labour market pulse
Fri 9 May 08:00 China Trade Balance (Apr) $80.0bn $102.0bn Medium — export tariff front-loading fading?
Fri 9 May 14:30 US Non-Farm Payrolls (Apr) +130k +228k High — Fed policy input; watch avg hourly earnings

Historical Reaction Patterns:

  • US NFP (Friday): A print below +100k typically triggers a 0.8–1.2% rally in S&P 500 (bad news = rate-cut hope). A print above +200k with wage growth >0.3% m/m sells off equities by 0.5–0.9%.
  • Germany Factory Orders / IP: Beats rarely move DAX more than 0.3% unless they coincide with a broader risk-on session. Misses are ignored if Bund yields are falling.
  • BoE (Thursday): If the MPC votes 7-2 to hold (vs. 6-3 expected), GBP rallies 0.5% and EUR/GBP drops. Any mention of "gradual easing" in the statement is dovish.

8. Risk Dashboard

Risk Category Level (1–10) Flashpoint / Trigger Probability (This Week)
Geopolitical — Ukraine 3 No active energy disruption; diplomatic fatigue priced 5%
Geopolitical — Middle East 4 Gaza spillover to shipping; currently contained 10%
Geopolitical — Taiwan / US-China 5 Trump tariff expansion to semis; elevated but static 15%
Policy — Tariffs 6 New sectoral tariffs (autos, pharma) rumoured for May 20%
Policy — EU Fiscal 4 German coalition fiscal spending bill pending; slow grind 10%
Technical — EURO STOXX 600 6 Close below 530 triggers CTA selling 25%
Technical — S&P 500 5 Break below 5,450 opens 5,300 20%
Volatility — VIX / VSTOXX 3 VSTOXX at 16.2 underprices earnings dispersion 30%
Credit — EU IG / HY 2 Spreads tight; no stress 5%
Liquidity — Holiday / Quarter-End 2 UK bank holiday Mon 4 May (past); markets normal 0%

Top Three Risks This Week:

  1. Tariff policy surprise: The Trump administration has signalled "reciprocal tariff" adjustments by mid-May. Any announcement on European autos or pharmaceuticals during this week would hit DAX and STOXX 600 auto/health care names asymmetrically.
  2. ASML regulatory shock: A US Commerce Department interim rule restricting DUV immersion tool service to Chinese fabs (reported by Bloomberg on 1 May) could drop ASML 5–8% in a single session.
  3. US NFP / wage spiral: If Friday's payrolls print >200k with average hourly earnings +0.4% m/m, the "Fed on hold for longer" narrative reprices US yields higher and drags global risk assets.

9. Key Events — Day-by-Day Map

Monday 5 May

  • HIGH: TotalEnergies Q1 earnings (post-market)
  • HIGH: OPEC+ JMMC meeting (Vienna)
  • MEDIUM: Germany Factory Orders (08:00 CET)
  • MEDIUM: US ISM Services (15:00 CET)
  • LOW: UK bank holiday (markets closed; thin European liquidity in morning)

Tuesday 6 May

  • HIGH: Allianz Q1 earnings (pre-market)
  • HIGH: SAP Sapphire NOW begins (Orlando; AI announcements)
  • MEDIUM: Germany Industrial Production (08:00 CET)
  • MEDIUM: Eurozone Retail Sales (11:00 CET)
  • LOW: EU finance ministers meeting (Luxembourg)

Wednesday 7 May

  • HIGH: ASML Q1 earnings (post-market)
  • HIGH: Adidas Q1 earnings (pre-market)
  • MEDIUM: Deutsche Telekom ex-dividend (€0.90/share)
  • MEDIUM: US ADP Employment (14:15 CET)

Thursday 8 May

  • HIGH: Siemens Q2 FY earnings (pre-market)
  • HIGH: Bank of England policy decision (12:00 CET)
  • MEDIUM: Germany CPI final (08:00 CET)
  • MEDIUM: Shell Q1 earnings (pre-market)
  • MEDIUM: Infineon / STM automotive tech day

Friday 9 May

  • HIGH: US Non-Farm Payrolls (14:30 CET)
  • MEDIUM: China Trade Balance (08:00 CET)
  • LOW: EU Commissioner speeches (no policy expected)

10. Portfolio Implications

For Long-Term ETF Holders

Rebalancing Signals:

  • EURO STOXX 600: No rebalancing needed if the 200-day MA holds. If the index closes Friday below 530, consider trimming 5% into strength and adding to Utilities / Health Care sector ETFs.
  • MSCI World: The 68% US weight is a currency risk if EUR/USD breaks 1.10. If you are unhedged and EUR-based, consider rotating 10–15% of MSCI World exposure into a EUR-hedged share class (e.g., IWDE) on a 3-month tactical basis. The 1.8% annual hedging cost is below the FX drag if EUR/USD reaches 1.12.
  • MSCI EM: Neutral. The 1,100–1,150 range is a "wait and see" zone. Add only if China delivers a >RMB 2tn fiscal package. Otherwise, keep EM allocation at strategic weight (5–10% for most European investors).

Currency Hedge Adjustments:

  • EUR-based investors with unhedged S&P 500 / Nasdaq exposure have lost ~2.2% in EUR terms YTD due to FX. If ECB-Fed divergence continues, this drag worsens. A partial hedge (50% of US equity exposure) is sensible for risk-averse holders.

For Swing Traders

Best Setups This Week (Ranked by Conviction):

  1. Allianz (ALV.DE) — Long: Earnings catalyst + 4.9% dividend yield + technical support at €278. Risk/reward is favourable with a stop at €278.
  2. TotalEnergies (TTE) — Long: Earnings + OPEC same day. Brent at $62.80 is near the company's cash breakeven. Asymmetric upside if cuts hold.
  3. Siemens (SIE.DE) — Long: Industrial trough narrative. €172 support is strong. If Digital Industries margin inflects, the stock runs to €188.
  4. ASML (ASML.AS) — Post-Earnings Dip Buy: High implied move (±4.8%) means volatility. If the stock sells off on regulatory noise but fundamentals (backlog, 2026 guidance) are intact, the €610–620 zone is a swing entry.
  5. Adidas (ADS.DE) — Momentum Long: Above €250, the path to €265 is open if Q1 confirms product-cycle transition. Tight stop at €242.

Sectors to Avoid / Short Bias:

  • European Energy: Brent weakness, hedge fund de-grossing, and negative earnings revision momentum make this a "don't catch the falling knife" sector this week.
  • European Materials: China stimulus is rumoured but not delivered. Copper and iron ore are drifting. Wait for concrete fiscal numbers before buying Glencore, Anglo American, or ArcelorMittal.
  • European Banks: If the German 10Y Bund breaks below 2.40%, the yield curve flattens further and NIMs compress. Avoid adding to Deutsche Bank, ING, or BNP Paribas until the curve steepens.

Risk Management

Position Sizing: Given VSTOXX at 16.2 (low vol) and earnings dispersion at 4.2% (high stock-specific vol), single-stock position sizes should be reduced by 15–20% this week relative to non-earnings weeks. A 2% portfolio risk per trade is prudent; tighten to 1.5% for high-beta names (ASML, Adidas, SAP).

Stop-Loss Review:

  • If you hold EURO STOXX 600 broad exposure, a weekly close below 530 is the macro stop. It would confirm a break of the 200-day MA and likely trigger systematic selling.
  • If you hold MSCI World, a break below 3,380 (S&P 500 below 5,400) suggests risk-off positioning. Raise cash to 15–20%.

Volatility Hedging: For traders with concentrated single-stock longs into earnings, consider buying protective puts on the EURO STOXX 600 (e.g., May expiry 520 put) as a cheap portfolio hedge. At 16.2 VSTOXX, index options are underpricing tail risk.


Sources & Data Integrity

  • Index levels, MAs, sector performance: Bloomberg, STOXX Ltd., MSCI Inc. Data as of market close 2 May 2026.
  • Central bank policy, rates: ECB press conference 30 April 2026; Federal Reserve FOMC statement 29 April 2026; Bank of England preview based on consensus compiled by Bloomberg.
  • FX, commodities: Bloomberg, Refinitiv. Brent, gold, copper prices as of 2 May 2026.
  • Flows: EPFR Global, Goldman Sachs Prime Brokerage weekly notes (week ending 30 April 2026).
  • Earnings consensus: Bloomberg IBES consensus estimates as of 2 May 2026.
  • Implied moves: Bloomberg OVML, at-the-money straddle pricing for May expiry.
  • Economic calendar: Bloomberg, Forex Factory, national statistical offices (Destatis, ONS, BLS, NBS China).
  • Geopolitical assessment: Atlantic Council, IISS, and open-source reporting as of 2–3 May 2026.

Disclaimer: This briefing is prepared for informational purposes only. It does not constitute investment advice, an offer, or a solicitation. All scenarios are probability-weighted and contingent on the stated assumptions. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Positions should be sized according to individual risk tolerance.


End of Briefing — Prepared Sunday, 3 May 2026, 21:00 CET