- World Cup kicks off in North America with the opening match on June 11.
- The new 48-team format adds to the excitement as squads arrive.
- Deutsche Bank and Goldman Sachs give their economic predictions on the impact of the tournament.
- But it's not only soccer kicking off next week...
- London Tech Week gets underway as the AI bull run continues despite concerns in the chip sector.
- Private markets are back in focus as SuperReturn gets underway in Berlin.
- SpaceX IPO hopes to shoot for the stars when Elon Musk's company starts trading on Friday.
There is a special type of fever around a men's soccer World Cup. And the 2026 edition of the tournament is causing even more excitement, with 48 teams instead of the usual 32, and three host nations instead of the usual one.
Matches will stretch from Vancouver to Mexico City from June 11 to July 19, marking the first time the games are being hosted in North America since 1994.
There will be winners and losers on and off the pitch. Goldman Sachs predicts the main sector beneficiaries will include European and U.S. consumer staples, U.S. retail, and hospitality firms. But the investment bank also warns that "while the World Cup is undoubtedly a major commercial event, it does not necessarily follow that the macroeconomic impact on the host nations will be substantial or long-lasting."
Deutsche Bank analysts believe sports betting platforms also stand to benefit. But a battle could be brewing between the traditional bookmakers and the ever-growing
prediction markets. This is the first World Cup where Polymarket and Kalshi are now significant forces in the sports betting space.
While billions are expected to tune into the matches, it's not just soccer that's kicking off next week...
Investors will be carefully watching AI stocks after a volatile set of trading days. U.S. semiconductor giant
Broadcom sparked a sell-off across the global chip space after issuing a disappointing forecast for its AI chip sales.
Expect more headlines from London Tech Week, which gets underway on Monday.
Anthropic's announcement of its highly anticipated IPO, as well as any updates from OpenAI on its plans to go public, will top the agenda.
Also in focus next week — private markets.
One of the biggest events of the year gets underway in Berlin, with the annual SuperReturn conference. This year, headlines around capping fund withdrawals and redemption limits look set to dominate the conversations.
Swiss fund manager
Partners Group warned investors it could limit withdrawals across more of its funds, after limiting withdrawals from one fund sparked a sell-off in U.S. stocks exposed to private markets. Blackstone then announced it had restricted its flagship fund withdrawals, as private asset fears have reemerged.
CNCB will be live from SuperReturn on Tuesday and Wednesday, with a host of big names from private markets.
As billions watch the soccer, all eyes will also be on the market as one of the most anticipated IPOs of all time takes off on Friday.
SpaceX will hope to shoot for the stars on Friday when it lists in what is set to be the largest-ever public sale of shares.

The path to going public for Elon Musk's mega company has been as dramatic as any World Cup final — an unprecedented move to price at exactly $135 a share, a sky-high valuation of $1.7 trillion, a reality check from the S&P over entry requirements, and a push to reach an unprecedented number of retail investors. That's all alongside its ambition to colonize Mars.
So as nations start their quest for World Cup glory, investors are also set to get their fill of market moments.
Monday: London Tech Week
Tuesday: SuperReturn Berlin
Wednesday: SuperReturn Berlin
Thursday: ECB monetary policy decision
Friday: SpaceX IPO
Disclosure: CNBC and Kalshi have a commercial relationship that includes customer acquisition and a minority investment.<small>Source: CNBC</small>
Business
Global week ahead: Soccer isn't the only thing that's kicking off
CNBC
June 07, 2026
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