European Gas, Oil, and ASML Shares: Why the Dutch Market Is Trading on Global Macro Risk
In 2026, the Dutch market has once again found itself in a position where local stocks are trading off the broader macro backdrop: oil, European gas, interest rates, and global risk appetite. This is especially visible in the Netherlands because of the market’s structure: on the one hand, it includes rate- and cycle-sensitive technology stories such as ASML; on the other, Europe is once again being forced to confront expensive energy after the spike in oil and gas caused by the conflict around Iran.
Why Not Oil, but Gas Matters for the Netherlands Right Now
If for the broader market it is enough to watch Brent, for the Netherlands — and for northern Europe more generally — TTF gas also matters. The front-month Dutch contract at the TTF gas hub, Europe’s main benchmark, jumped by about 40% to €44.51 per MWh as the conflict expanded and LNG supply risks increased.
Then on March 4, European gas reached a three-year high of €65.79 per MWh, sharply bringing energy-shock fears back into focus. For the Dutch market, this is not an abstract theme: TTF is literally the local pricing benchmark for European gas.
Why ASML Is Especially Sensitive to This Regime
ASML is not an energy company and not a direct beneficiary of expensive commodities. It is a global technology story that is highly sensitive to the capital expenditure cycle, interest rates, and broader sentiment in the tech sector.
Reuters wrote back in July 2025 that the company had warned it might miss its 2026 growth outlook because of tariff uncertainty and delays in client investment decisions. In other words, ASML was already entering 2026 in an environment that was far from calm.
When a new energy shock is added on top of that, the market’s logic becomes harsher. Rising yields and fears of rates staying higher for longer put pressure on the valuation of companies whose worth depends heavily on future demand and a long investment cycle.
Why the AEX Trades Like a Global Index
The Dutch market is not only ASML, but ASML is precisely what makes the AEX especially sensitive to global tech sentiment. At the start of the year, a 7% surge in ASML was the main driver of the European tech sector. That clearly shows the risk structure: when a major technology story sets the tone, the index begins to trade more on global macro forces than on the local economy.
In periods like this, the AEX is driven simultaneously through several external channels: energy prices, yields, the dollar, and expectations for global demand for semiconductor equipment.
How Expensive Gas and Oil Change Tech-Sector Valuation
For Europe’s tech sector, expensive energy is dangerous not directly, but through second-order effects. Higher energy prices strengthen inflation expectations and then increase the risk of a more hawkish rate path.
For ASML, that creates a double pressure.
On one side, rising rates compress multiples and reduce the market’s willingness to pay for a long-duration technology story.
On the other, the broader increase in macro risk makes clients more cautious about large capital expenditures.
What This Means for Investors
It means investors need to watch more than just ASML’s earnings reports. They also need to follow TTF gas, Brent, rate expectations, and the overall direction of Europe’s tech sector. When gas and oil rise at the same time and the market fears inflation, Dutch equities increasingly trade as part of the global risk complex.
That is why the answer to the question “is ASML worth buying now?” depends on more than just confidence in the semiconductor cycle. It also depends on whether Europe remains stuck in a regime of expensive energy and expensive money. If that regime eases, the Dutch market could recover quickly. If not, macro risk will remain the main driver.