European stocks to open higher amid easing oil price, Iran war

People visit a lookout point in Greenwich Park, with the Canary Wharf financial district in the distance, during sunny weather but cold weather in London, U.K., on Jan. 2, 2026.
Henry Nicholls | Afp | Getty Images
European stock markets traded lower on Friday, reversing their positive start to the session, as oil prices resumed their rally with investors monitoring the ongoing war in the Middle East.
The pan-European Stoxx 600 was down 1.1% by 12:05 p.m. in London (7:05 a.m. ET), as most major bourses and sectors slipped into negative territory.
European markets
| TICKER | COMPANY | PRICE | CHANGE | %CHANGE |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| .STOXX | STOXX Europe 600 | 599.36 | -5.47 | -0.90% |
| .FTSE | FTSE 100 | 10,354.06 | -59.88 | -0.57% |
| .GDAXI | DAX GR EUR INDEX | 23,632.88 | -182.87 | -0.77% |
| .FCHI | CAC 40 Index | 7,973.36 | -72.44 | -0.90% |
| .FTMIB | FTSE MIB | 44,180.97 | -427.58 | -0.96% |
| .IBEX | IBEX 35 Idx | 17,074.10 | -171.10 | -0.99% |
Capital markets are capping off a volatile week that saw a sell-off grip assets across the board following the outbreak of the U.S.-Iran war.
Stocks listed in Europe ended Thursday’s session broadly lower, as uncertainty around the conflict in the Middle East lingered and overwrote some tentative optimism that saw regional equities claw back some lost ground on Wednesday.
For the week, the pan-European Stoxx 600 is on course for a 4.6% loss – its deepest since last April, at the height of market fears about a U.S.-China trade war.
Oil prices surged again on Friday morning, reversing their earlier easing, with global benchmark Brent crude gaining 4.6% to settle at $89.28 a barrel. West Texas Intermediate crude was last seen 6.3% higher, with the U.S. benchmark trading at $86.11 per barrel.
It comes after the U.S. issued a 30-day waiver to India — the world’s third-largest oil importer — to resume purchases of Russian oil. Washington had earlier imposed 25% “penalty” tariffs on India for buying Russian crude, which were revoked last month.
The conflict between Iran and the U.S. enters its seventh day on Friday. In a press conference on Thursday, U.S. Defense Secretary Pete Hegseth said the U.S. had “only just begun to fight.”
“Iran is hoping that we cannot sustain this, which is a really bad miscalculation,” he told reporters. “There’s no shortage of American will here … If you think you’ve seen something, just wait. The amount of combat power that’s still flowing, that’s still coming, that we’ll be able to project over Iran is at multiples of what it currently is right now when you add up our capabilities and those of the Israeli Defense Forces.”
Among individual European stocks, Sectra surged 13% to top the Stoxx 600 after the Swedish medtech name posted an 8% net sales increase in the nine months between May 2025 and January 2026, reaching $272 million, as operating profits reached $54 million, a 21% rise.
German defense name Renk was up 6.1% in early afternoon trade, partly reversing the previous session’s losses, while ITV added 5.8% following reports that the U.K. broadcaster remains in talks with Sky over a possible sale of its television business.
Asian stocks rose on Friday as oil prices fell, easing concerns about global energy prices and a potential resultant spike in inflation. In the U.S., stock futures also edged higher ahead of the week’s final trading session.
European investors will also be monitoring economic data releases, including German factory orders, U.K. house prices and euro zone GDP figures on Friday. German airline Lufthansa will report earnings.




