Investors should give European stockmarkets a second look

Investors tend to think that European stockmarkets are full of stale “old economy” firms while the US is full of fast-growing tech stocks. But European markets now offer their own healthy mix of quality growth stocks.

Berlin © Getty Images/iStockphoto
Germany is benefiting from its exporters’ exposure to the strong Chinese recovery
(Image credit: © Getty Images/iStockphoto)

A surge in coronavirus cases in Europe means that talk of a swift recovery is now a “summer memory”, says Peter Goodman in The New York Times. French prime minister Jean Castex this week acknowledged that “the second wave is here”, as governments across the continent tightened restrictions. Spain has declared a state of emergency in Madrid and instituted a partial lockdown there.

Economic gloom is spreading. France now expects activity to remain stuck at 95% of pre-pandemic levels for the rest of the year. Spanish business sentiment hit a four-month low last month. The pan-European Europe Stoxx 600 index is down 11% so far this year.

The changing of the guard

The common investment “trope” is that Europe is full of “old economy” firms while the US races ahead with technology, says Graham Secker in the Financial Times. Yet that idea is “outdated”. Banks and energy no longer dominate the MSCI Europe index. Indeed, the weighting of banks on European indices is now the same as the global average. The areas where European markets are “overweight” the global average today – healthcare, consumer staples and industrials – offer a “healthy mix of good, quality growth”. The European “leopard is indeed changing its spots”.

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If the US market is increasingly a wager on tech, then Europe is “a bet on drugs”, says Stephen Wilmot in The Wall Street Journal. Five of its ten biggest firms are now drugs firms. Back in 2004 the top three Stoxx Europe 50 firms were all British: BP, HSBC and Vodafone. Today’s leading trio are Swiss: two pharmaceutical giants (Roche and Novartis) and Nestlé. Europe offers other “growth niches” as well, from French luxury goods to Danish cleantech (energy efficiency), says Reshma Kapadia in Barron’s. America’s S&P 500 has “eviscerated” other markets over the past decade, “returning 13.9% a year, on average” against 5.5% for the World ex-US.

Yet stretched valuations are giving Americans the “urge to do some portfolio globe-trotting”. If we strip out expectations about growth and just look at current valuations, then US equities are “priced to deliver” just 0.5% in annual real returns over the next decade, says Robert Arnott, the founder of Research Affiliates. Europe and Japan are offering real returns of “about 5%”.

A German anchor

Germany’s Dax has outperformed other European markets this year, falling by just 2.2%, thanks to the country’s export-led exposure to the strong Chinese recovery, says Anna Isaac in The Wall Street Journal. Analysts think German carmakers will also get a boost as the pandemic makes more people avoid public transport. In 2018 the debt of German non-financial companies was about 58% of GDP, compared with 84% in the UK and 141% in France. As Christoph Ohme of DWS Group puts it, strong public and corporate finances make Germany resilient in a crisis. It is a “stable anchor” for the world economy.

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