Chart #1 —
US stocks have overtaken Europe in 2025 (in local currencies)
Many investors anticipated that Germany’s “whatever it takes” fiscal stimulus and a sharp rise in European defence spending would drive a sustained upturn in the region’s equity markets. At the beginning of the year, a Bank of America (BofA) survey of fund managers showed allocations to Eurozone stocks, reaching their highest level since 2021.
That momentum has since faded. Strong earnings from the US mega caps have propelled Wall Street stocks to fresh highs, despite Trump’s tariff offensive and deteriorating US economic data. By comparison, weak second-quarter earnings in Europe have supported the growing view that the region’s stock rally is wearing down.
With over half of the Stoxx Europe 600 companies having reported earnings, the index is on track to deliver zero earnings growth compared with a year ago, according to BofA, sapping optimism over a durable market recovery.
Meanwhile, the S&P 500 index’s constituents are projected to deliver 9 per cent year-on-year average earnings growth fuelled largely by strong results from Silicon Valley’s tech giants and Wall Street banks, according to BofA.

Source: Financial Times, LSEG








