S&P 500 5,235.18 +1.02%EUR/USD 1.0840 +0.21%GBP/USD 1.2710 +0.14%USD/JPY 149.50 −0.18%BRENT $82.40 −0.81%BTC $67,800 −0.21%GOLD $2,341 +0.55%NASDAQ 16,420.55 +0.74%S&P 500 5,235.18 +1.02%EUR/USD 1.0840 +0.21%GBP/USD 1.2710 +0.14%USD/JPY 149.50 −0.18%BRENT $82.40 −0.81%BTC $67,800 −0.21%GOLD $2,341 +0.55%NASDAQ 16,420.55 +0.74%
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European Equities Gain as U.S. Markets Observe Holiday

European benchmarks trended upward on Monday as U.S. markets remained closed for a holiday, leaving regional corporate earnings and a sharp drop in natural gas prices to dictate market sentiment.

European Equities Gain as U.S. Markets Observe Holiday

Major European indices moved in a narrow range during morning trading, with the Stoxx Europe 600 rising 0.3% and the FTSE 100 adding 0.1%. In the Eurozone, France's CAC 40 increased 0.2% and Germany's DAX rose 0.3%. Regional sentiment was bolstered by the banking sector, where NatWest Group shares jumped 3.8% and Ayvens rose 2.9%. These gains were partially offset by volatility in the tech and industrial sectors, as Embracer Group Series B fell 4.2% and Norsk Hydro shed 4.1%.

Energy and Currency Movements

The energy sector saw a significant pullback as the European benchmark for natural gas, the TTF futures contract, tumbled 5.1% to 30.85 euros per megawatt hour. Crude oil followed a similar downward trajectory; Brent fell 0.2% to $67.62 a barrel, while WTI crude mirrored the decline to settle at $62.74. Currency markets remained relatively quiet in the absence of American trade, though the Wall Street Journal Dollar Index edged up 0.1% to 94.24.

In the fixed-income market, the German 10-year Bund yield edged down to 2.751%, according to market data, reflecting a minor shift in investor appetite for sovereign debt. Across the Atlantic, the 10-year U.S. Treasury yield remained flat at 4.052% amid the holiday trading pause. Meanwhile, Asian markets delivered a mixed performance; the Hang Seng climbed 0.5% while Japan’s Nikkei 225 slipped 0.2% in a session characterized by the absence of Chinese and American participants.

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