
European stock futures pointed to a modestly firmer open on Thursday, with FTSE 100 Futures up around 0.4% at 10,649.5, although the tone remained cautious as investors weighed a sharp rally in regional equities against fresh doubts.
The guarded advance followed a strong session in the cash market on Wednesday, when the pan-European STOXX Europe 600 climbed 3.7%, marking its biggest one-day gain in about a year.
Travel, industrial and banking stocks led the move, helping lift the benchmark as investors rotated back into risk-sensitive assets after signs of de-escalation in the Middle East.
Futures signalled a firmer start for Europe, but not an unqualified extension of Wednesday’s rebound.
The measured gains suggested investors remained wary of chasing the rally too aggressively, particularly as the geopolitical backdrop continued to shift.
That caution was reinforced by renewed tensions around the ceasefire, with Iranian officials accusing the US and its allies of breaching the spirit of the agreement, citing continued Israeli strikes in Lebanon and ongoing disagreements over nuclear terms.
For markets, that raised the prospect that the ceasefire might prove less stable than initially hoped.
Any renewed deterioration in relations could quickly reverse the improvement in sentiment that helped European equities rebound in the previous session.
President Donald Trump added to that uncertainty late on Wednesday, saying US military forces would remain in and around the region until what he described as a “real agreement” with Iran is fully complied with.
The remarks underscored that, while immediate tensions may have eased, Washington is not signalling a broader retreat from the conflict zone.
That matters for European investors because the region remains highly sensitive to swings in energy prices, shipping risks and wider global risk appetite whenever Middle East tensions intensify.
The market response so far suggests investors are treating the latest advance as a relief rally rather than a full return to confidence.
Wednesday’s surge in the STOXX Europe 600 reflected a broad-based move back into cyclical sectors, but Thursday’s more measured futures action points to a market that still wants confirmation before extending gains.
Even so, the rebound in European equities was notable for both its scale and breadth.
A rise of 3.7% in the STOXX Europe 600 marked the strongest daily performance in roughly a year, suggesting investors were willing to reverse defensive positioning once fears of immediate escalation appeared to ease.
That shift matters because Europe has often been particularly sensitive during periods of geopolitical stress, especially when energy security becomes a concern.
A steady futures open would indicate that investors still see room for a near-term recovery, even if headline risk remains elevated.
For Thursday’s session, the key question is whether the gains in futures can hold once cash trading begins.
If investors continue to favour industrials, financials and other economically sensitive sectors, the rebound could broaden into a second day.
If tensions around Iran deepen again, however, early gains may fade quickly.
For now, European stock futures are pointing to a positive but guarded open, with Wednesday’s relief rally still intact, though far from fully secure.
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