European Stocks Slide as Trump Threatens 200% Tariffs on French Beverages
European Stocks Slide as Trump Threatens 200% Tariffs on French Beverages
In early 2026, European equity markets fell sharply after renewed US tariff threats, including a proposed 200% levy on French wine and champagne, triggering broad risk-off sentiment across stocks and heightened volatility in FX markets.
European markets opened the week under heavy pressure as trade-war risks resurfaced with force. The catalyst was a series of statements from US President Donald Trump linking sweeping tariff increases to geopolitical and diplomatic disputes involving Greenland, France, and broader EU–US relations. What followed was a synchronized sell-off across equities, renewed policy uncertainty, and growing concern about retaliatory measures from Europe.
European markets opened the week under heavy pressure as trade-war risks resurfaced with force. The catalyst was a series of statements from US President Donald Trump linking sweeping tariff increases to geopolitical and diplomatic disputes involving Greenland, France, and broader EU–US relations. What followed was a synchronized sell-off across equities, renewed policy uncertainty, and growing concern about retaliatory measures from Europe.
What triggered the European market sell-off
By mid-morning in London (09:50 GMT), the Stoxx Europe 600 index had fallen by 1.4%, with every major sector trading in negative territory. The decline reflected investor reassessment of trade risks after Trump reiterated plans to impose escalating tariffs on eight European countries unless the US is allowed to acquire Greenland, a semi-autonomous Danish territory rich in strategic resources.Proposed tariff structure (as stated):
10% starting February 1, 2026
Up to 25% by June 1, 2026
Targeted countries: Denmark, Norway, Sweden, France, Germany, the UK, the Netherlands, and Finland
These measures would be imposed on top of existing US tariffs of approximately 10% on UK exports and 15% on EU exports, raising the effective trade burden materially.

European Stocks Slide as Trump Threatens 200% Tariffs on French Beverages
Why French beverage stocks were hit hardest
Market stress intensified after Trump separately threatened to impose 200% tariffs on French wine and champagne, escalating a political dispute linked to France’s refusal to participate in his proposed “Gaza Peace Council.”French luxury and beverage stocks reacted immediately:
LVMH (France): shares fell 2.1% in early Paris trading
Rémy Cointreau: declined amid concerns over US market exposure
Taittinger / Telmont champagne segment: down approximately 1.5%
For investors, the issue is not short-term sales disruption but margin risk and pricing power erosion in the US market, one of the most profitable destinations for premium European beverages.
Broader sector impact: autos, luxury, and exporters
The sell-off was not confined to beverages. European autos and luxury goods—both highly exposed to US demand—also came under pressure.These sectors are particularly sensitive to tariffs because:
They rely on global supply chains
They face limited ability to re-route exports quickly
They operate with high fixed costs
Meanwhile, select European defense stocks showed relative resilience, reflecting rising geopolitical tension and expectations of increased regional security spending.
FX markets send a mixed but telling signal
Interestingly, currency markets did not mirror equity panic immediately.As of the European session:
EUR/USD rose 0.7% to around 1.1725
EUR/GBP strengthened 0.35% to 0.87
GBP/USD climbed 0.36% to 1.3471
This apparent contradiction reflects two forces:
Short-covering and positioning effects in FX
Expectations that trade escalation could eventually weigh more heavily on US growth and policy credibility
However, history suggests FX markets often lag equity stress during the early stages of trade disputes.
UK data adds a secondary macro layer
Sterling was also supported by domestic data. UK employment figures showed:Unemployment unchanged at 5.1% (three months to November)
Wage growth slowed to 4.5%
While not inflationary, the data reinforced expectations of policy stability from the Bank of England, temporarily insulating GBP from trade-related volatility.
Europe’s response: the Anti-Coercion Instrument enters focus
European leaders labeled the US tariff threats “unacceptable” and began discussing potential countermeasures. France is reportedly pushing for the EU to activate its most powerful economic defense tool—the Anti-Coercion Instrument (ACI).
The ACI allows the EU to:
Restrict US firms from public procurement
Impose trade and services limitations
Limit foreign direct investment access
Crucially, this instrument has never been used before. Its discussion alone signals that Europe is preparing for escalation rather than symbolic retaliation.
Why markets are taking this seriously
This episode differs from past trade rhetoric for three reasons:Tariffs are tied to political demands, not trade imbalances
Proposed rates (200%) are punitive, not corrective
Europe is openly considering legal-economic retaliation
As Deutsche Bank strategist Jim Reid noted in a Tuesday briefing, markets have reacted—but have not fully priced the risk of further escalation if rhetoric intensifies.
The sell-off in European markets is not just a reaction to tariffs—it is a response to policy uncertainty returning as a dominant market force. Threats of 200% tariffs, combined with Europe’s readiness to deploy its strongest countermeasures, create a fragile environment for equities and currencies alike. In 2026, trade policy once again sits at the center of global market risk.
By Claire Whitmore
January 21, 2026
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January 21, 2026
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