Europe woke up to two big stories this week: the central bank lifted borrowing costs while the price of oil fell sharply. Both changes flow from the Middle East war that began in late February and still shapes prices across the continent.
We have picked the eight items that matter most for your money and the wider mood. Each is written in plain English, with any tricky terms explained as we go.
Today’s europe Intelligence Brief covers the region’s finance, markets, economy, and politics. We pulled it together from German, French, Italian, Spanish, Dutch, and English sources.
Eurozone – Central Bank Raises Rates
First increase since 2023
The European Central Bank, which sets borrowing costs for countries that use the euro, raised its three main rates by a quarter of a percentage point on Wednesday.
This was the first rise since September 2023, and the bank pointed to higher energy prices caused by the Middle East war as the reason.
What it means for you
The deposit rate, which guides what banks pay savers, rose from 2.00% to 2.25%, and the new rates take effect on June 17.
The bank also trimmed its growth hopes for 2026 to 0.8% while nudging up its inflation forecast to 3.0%, and one lender, LBBW, expects up to two more increases by year-end.
Eurozone – Oil Price Tumbles
Cheapest since March
Brent crude, the main global oil benchmark, fell more than 4% on Friday to below 86.50 dollars a barrel, its lowest since early March.
Over the week the drop was around 6%, bringing welcome relief after months of costly fuel.
A possible deal
Hopes rose around a draft Iranian agreement that would lift oil sanctions and reopen the Strait of Hormuz shipping route within 30 days.
One United States official put the chance of an agreement soon at 80%, though prices still sit more than 20% above where they were before the war on February 28.
Rio Times · Live Market Intelligence
Commodities — Live Market Board
Global
Jun 13, 2026 · 19:24
Brent crude · benchmark
87.33
-3.37%
+17.65% over 12 months
Market breadth · 15 names
60% advancing
9 ▲ advancing6 declining ▼
Currencies, rates & key inputs
Full instrument board
| GOLD | 4,239 | +3.63% | +23.54% | 4,090 | 4,268 | 4,191 | 132,801 |
| SILVER | 67.97 | +6.40% | +87.35% | 63.88 | 68.45 | 65.97 | 43,187 |
| BRENT | 87.33 | -3.37% | +17.65% | 90.38 | 89.87 | 85.80 | 33,223 |
| WTI | 84.88 | -3.23% | +16.31% | 87.71 | 87.23 | 83.20 | 207,640 |
| COPPER | 6.45 | +2.97% | +34.19% | 6.26 | 6.50 | 6.36 | 47,450 |
| LITHIUM | 82.37 | +2.02% | +123.04% | 80.74 | 82.77 | 81.32 | 262,331 |
| IRON ORE | 161.91 | — | +69.75% | 161.91 | 161.91 | 1 | |
| SOY | 1,132 | +1.52% | +5.82% | 1,115 | 1,120 | 1,109 | 64,616 |
| CORN | 412.75 | +0.24% | -7.14% | 411.75 | 417.00 | 408.50 | 193,539 |
| WHEAT | 584.50 | -0.38% | +7.49% | 586.75 | 594.25 | 579.75 | 80,259 |
| COFFEE | 253.80 | -0.06% | -27.42% | 253.95 | 254.35 | 249.25 | 21,906 |
| SUGAR | 14.24 | +3.26% | -11.72% | 13.79 | 14.50 | 14.22 | 75,211 |
| COCOA | 3,979 | +7.25% | -59.26% | 3,710 | 3,942 | 3,787 | 17,092 |
| ORANGE JUICE | 164.85 | -0.57% | -39.86% | 165.80 | 167.95 | 162.00 | 691 |
| COTTON | 76.34 | +5.31% | +16.80% | 72.49 | 76.10 | 75.32 | 21,772 |
| BEEF | 241.18 | -4.10% | +7.14% | 251.48 | 243.13 | 238.55 | 24,233 |
| CATTLE | 357.43 | -0.62% | +16.64% | 359.65 | 360.30 | 355.20 | 6,704 |
| USD/BRL | 5.06 | +0.01% | -8.54% | 5.06 | 5.06 | 5.06 | — |
Largest moves today
COCOA
3,979
+7.25%
SILVER
67.97
+6.40%
COTTON
76.34
+5.31%
BEEF
241.18
-4.10%
GOLD
4,239
+3.63%
BRENT
87.33
-3.37%
SUGAR
14.24
+3.26%
WTI
84.88
-3.23%
The session read
The Brent crude eased 3.37%, with breadth positive — 9 of 15 names higher. COCOA led, while BEEF lagged.
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Germany and France – Fighter-Jet Project Collapses
No common aircraft
Chancellor Friedrich Merz of Germany and President Emmanuel Macron of France concluded that planemakers Airbus and Dassault cannot agree to build a joint fighter jet.
The argument centred on who does which work, who owns the patents, and who leads, with Spain also taking part through its firm Indra.
A costly setback
The Next Generation Fighter is now abandoned, leaving Germany with an estimated loss of just over 3 billion euros.
The wider project was once valued at about 100 billion euros, though some cooperation on linked combat technology may continue with new partners.
Spain – Market Hits Record High
All-time peak
Spain’s main share index, the IBEX 35, closed at a record high on Friday, rising 2.59% on the day and 2.3% over the week.
It finished at 18,764.40 points, with renewable-energy and airline companies leading the gains.
Oil relief helps
The market recovered to where it stood before the Middle East conflict, helped by the falling oil price below 90 dollars.
The cost for Spain to borrow over ten years stood at 3.419%, a comfortable level for the government.
France – Austerity Letter on 2027 Budget
A stern note to ministers
Newspaper Les Echos revealed a tough letter from Prime Minister Sébastien Lecornu ordering ministers to cut requests that are not top priorities.
Budget talks had exposed more than 30 billion euros in extra funding demands, including 24 billion euros of new spending.
Holding the line
Lecornu wants to keep the deficit, the gap between what the state spends and earns, at 5% of national output, and to avoid raising household taxes.
Aid to soften war-driven fuel prices, worth 1.2 billion euros, has already disturbed the plans for 2026.
Netherlands – Bank Cuts Growth Forecast
Pain but not recession
Rabobank’s June outlook says the Middle East crisis is causing pain but is not expected to tip the country into recession.
It cut growth by 0.2 of a point each year, blaming a weak start to the year and a longer-than-expected closure of the Hormuz shipping route.
Inflation creeping up
Higher oil and gas prices are seen lifting the cost of living, especially in 2027, when inflation is forecast at 3.9%.
Large-scale oil and gas shipping is not expected to resume before September, the bank’s main assumption.
United Kingdom – Borrowing Costs Ease
Calmer markets
Deutsche Bank noted on Friday that the British economy is holding up well while inflation softens a little.
The yield, or interest cost, on ten-year government bonds eased back toward 4.8% as oil prices fell.
Growth holds up
The economy grew 0.6% in the first three months of 2026, with both services and manufacturing up 0.8%.
London’s FTSE 100 share index rose 1.63% on Friday in the broad relief across Europe.
Germany – Record Defence Budget
Spending climbs
Parliamentary committees met on Wednesday to discuss buying new military equipment.
Defence spending for 2026 is set to reach 108.2 billion euros, the highest since the Cold War ended.
A longer plan
Of that sum, 25.51 billion euros comes from a special fund, with around 12.67 billion euros going on ammunition.
The plan is for spending to climb further to 153 billion euros by 2029, with firm Rheinmetall already tasked to deliver large ammunition volumes.
The Read
The two main forces shaping Europe this week pull in opposite directions: the central bank lifted borrowing costs to fight inflation, while falling oil prices offered households and businesses some relief.
Both stem from the Middle East war that began on February 28, which kept energy prices high and the Strait of Hormuz shipping route largely closed for over three months.
Politics added to the strain, with France ordering deep budget cuts, Germany and France ending their joint jet project, and Germany lifting defence spending to a post-Cold-War high.
What to Watch
- Today – Markets digest the central bank’s rate rise and the sharp fall in oil prices.
- This week – Italian voters head to a referendum on June 14 that tests the Meloni government.
- This week – The G7 summit runs June 15 to 17, where a United States and Iran deal could be signed.
- This week – The new central bank rates take effect on June 17, feeding through to savings and loans.
- This week – The European Council meets in Brussels June 18 to 19 on Ukraine, the Middle East and the budget.
- This week – British statistics body releases business insights on June 18 to gauge war impact on firms.
- Later – The next central bank rate decision lands on July 23, with at least one more rise expected.
- Later – Large-scale Gulf oil and gas shipping is expected to resume around September.

By The Rio Times | Created at 2026-06-13 22:24:53 | Updated at 2026-06-14 10:47:34
12 hours ago








