European stocks fell to a two-week low on Monday as two separate shocks hit markets at the same time: fresh escalation between Israel and Iran in the Middle East, and a broad selloff in artificial intelligence stocks that spread from the United States into Asian and European trading.
The pan-European STOXX 600 index bore the weight of both pressures simultaneously, an unusual combination that hit sectors with very different risk profiles. Energy traders and tech investors were both selling, which left few obvious places within the index to hide.
Oil surges, airlines retreat
Crude oil prices jumped more than 4% after Israel and Iran exchanged strikes over the weekend. That kind of move in oil is significant: it raises fuel costs almost immediately for airlines, which operate on thin margins and cannot always pass higher costs to passengers quickly. Energy-sensitive airline stocks fell as a direct result. At the same time, the same geopolitical shock that hurt airlines lifted energy producers, creating a split within the broader index that masked how wide the damage actually was.
A sustained move higher in oil also matters beyond aviation. Higher energy prices feed into manufacturing costs, logistics, and consumer energy bills across Europe, where energy security has been a persistent concern. If Middle East tensions remain elevated, that 4% oil spike could prove to be the floor rather than the peak.
AI jitters cross markets
The AI-related selloff added a second layer of pressure. Tech stocks in Europe declined in line with falls already seen in U.S. and Asian markets, suggesting the move was coordinated across time zones rather than driven by a Europe-specific catalyst. When sentiment shifts on high-valuation technology names, the selling tends to be fast and global because the same institutional investors hold these positions across multiple exchanges.
The AI trade has been one of the most crowded in global equity markets over the past two years. Crowded trades unwind sharply when confidence slips, because many investors try to exit through the same door. That dynamic, rather than any single piece of bad news, likely amplified the drop in European tech names on the day.
Together, the two forces, geopolitical risk pushing up commodities and sentiment risk pushing down growth stocks, created an unusually broad selloff. Defensive sectors and dividend-paying stocks typically benefit when markets fear geopolitical shocks, but the concurrent AI selloff made it harder for investors to rotate into safety cleanly.
One bright spot: Italian banking
Not everything fell. Monte dei Paschi di Siena, one of Italy's oldest banks, surged after Intesa Sanpaolo launched a takeover bid for the lender. Takeover targets almost always jump when a bid is announced, as the offer price sets a floor and investors price in the probability of a deal completing. The move added a rare patch of green to an otherwise red session on European exchanges.
The Intesa-Monte dei Paschi deal, if it completes, would represent further consolidation in Italian banking, a sector that has been restructuring for years following legacy bad-loan problems. Regulatory approval will be the next key hurdle, and the market will watch for any competing bids or political complications given Monte dei Paschi's long history of government involvement.
For the broader market, the key question now is whether Monday's selloff reflects a brief repricing or the start of a more sustained pullback. Two triggers, Middle East escalation and AI sentiment, remain live and unresolved. Oil prices, any further Israel-Iran developments, and the direction of U.S. tech stocks in the coming sessions will be the clearest early signals of whether European equities stabilize or continue to slide.