European stocks' 2025 outperformance is over, but don't forget the euro
LONDON (Reuters) -European stocks took an early lead in 2025, outperforming Wall Street thanks to erratic U.S. policymaking and Germany's once-in-a-generation fiscal shift, but U.S. markets have caught up.
The broad European STOXX 600 index was up 6.6% so far this year, as of Friday's close, compared with 6.8% for the S&P 500.
In March the STOXX was 10 percentage points ahead, leading European bulls to think this might be their time after years of European markets underperforming Wall Street.
Calls for European outperformance still ring true in currencies, however, with the euro up 14% against the dollar year to date.
Trade talks and the new U.S. tax-cut and spending law are tests for the rotation out of the U.S. and into Europe, said UBS Asset Management's head of global sovereign markets strategy Max Castelli.
"I don't think U.S. exceptionalism will come back with the same strength and intensity," he said. "But I would not rule out the big period of outperformance of European assets over the U.S. being over."
Here's a look at how Europe's performance against the U.S. stacks up.
BIG TECH IS BACK
Marija Veitmane, head of equity research at State Street Global Markets, said Wall Street shares started bouncing back in mid-April, partly because the "trade war became trade negotiations."
But the "real turning point" was corporate earnings season when "tech CEOs stood up and said 'Our earnings are going to be very strong'."
Tech accounts for roughly one-third of the S&P 500, and the sector is up 24% since the start of April, even including its plunge when U.S. President Donald Trump announced his tariff plans.
Nvidia, once again the world's largest company by market cap, has risen an even more dramatic 45%, and there isn't anything in Europe to match.
HOLD YOUR NERVE
But by no means all investors are rushing back to Wall Street with the S&P 500 at record highs, suggesting valuations are getting stretched.
"The tariff announcement showed how fast sentiment can change and how risky these high (U.S.) valuations are," said Madeleine Ronner, senior equity portfolio manager at asset manager DWS, adding that European valuations are more reasonable.
And while that gap had been appropriate because of slow corporate earnings growth, "Europe's (earnings per share) is starting to grow again, and the differential is getting smaller, which should be reflected in valuations," she said.
DWS sees U.S. and European GDP growth being roughly similar in 2025 and 2026, a further and sustainable boost to European companies' earnings.
CAN YOU BUY MORE DEFENCE STOCKS?
Investors have snapped up European stocks, but that has centred largely on the same sectors -- defence, up 50% this year, and banks up 28%, suggesting a lack of faith in the broader market.
The two account for more than 50% of the return of the STOXX 600, despite making up just 16% of the index, BNP Paribas Exane estimates.
That's not surprising as NATO members have agreed to increase defence spending, and massively in the case of Germany. But valuations are stretched.
Germany's Rheinmetall trades on a forward price to earnings ratio of more than 50; even Apple and Microsoft are only around 30.
LOVING THE EURO
The picture is clearer in currencies, where the euro is at a near four-year high and closing in on $1.20.
At the start of the year many analysts predicted the euro would fall below one dollar, thanks to what was then seen as an insatiable demand for U.S. assets.
But when this reversed, the euro began to appreciate, a move that grew as foreign holders of U.S. stock and bonds, fearing further dollar weakness, increased their currency hedges.
Now the euro is expected to keep gaining even if outflows from the U.S. stop.
"Foreigners don't need to sell U.S. assets to weaken the dollar but merely to say 'No thank you' to buying more," Deutsche Bank's head of FX strategy George Saravelos said in a note.
CURRENCIES MATTER
That currency move also affects equity investors, making European stocks cheaper for U.S. investors and Wall Street more expensive from Europe.
The S&P 500 may be at a record high for domestic investors, but priced in euros it's 9% off its February top.
"For euro-based investors the currency ate up so much U.S. assets' returns this year," said DWS' Ronner. "If there's another letdown, in euros that gets even worse."
On the other hand, the STOXX 600 in local currency terms is still shy of March's record, but priced in dollars it hit an all-time high in late June.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


New York Times
17 minutes ago
- New York Times
Andy Carroll: Ex-Liverpool, Newcastle striker joins sixth-tier Dagenham & Redbridge
Andy Carroll has joined National League South side Dagenham & Redbridge following his departure from French club Bordeaux. Carroll scored 11 goals in 23 matches for Bordeaux during 2024-25 as the six-time French champions recorded a fourth-place finish in Championnat National 2, the fourth tier of French football to which the club were administratively relegated last summer. Advertisement The 36-year-old former England international previously played in Ligue 2 for Amiens, scoring four goals in 2023-24. Ahead of Carroll's announcement by Dagenham & Redbridge on Saturday, the east London club confirmed they had been bought by a consortium of prominent Qatari private investors. The takeover remains subject to approvals from the Football Association and National League. The club said Youseph Al Sharif had been appointed as the club's interim chairman and would be supported by the team's former captain, Anwar Uddin, who joins as a non-executive director. It's not every day… ⚔️ — Dagenham & Redbridge (@Dag_RedFC) July 12, 2025 Carroll came through Newcastle's academy and after scoring 11 goals in the first half of the 2010-11 Premier League campaign, became Liverpool's record signing when he moved to Anfield for £35million on deadline day in January 2011. The striker scored 11 goals in 58 matches for Liverpool before joining West Ham United, where he scored 34 goals across seven years, before re-joining Newcastle in 2019 and having subsequent spells at West Bromwich Albion and Reading. Dagenham & Redbridge, who spent nine years in the Football League between 2007 and 2016, were relegated out of the National League last season, marking a first return to the sixth tier of the English football pyramid since 1999-00. 'The level does not matter, I just want to get on the pitch and play football,' Carroll told Sky Sports. 'I had clubs ringing me up from higher leagues but it has to be the right fit and what I want to do, rather than it being higher up or for more money. 'We have a project here to get the club out of the non-league. 'I have more excitement now than I ever have; I just love playing football and want to show everyone I'm just playing for the love of football rather than the levels.' (ROMAIN PERROCHEAU/AFP via Getty Images)

Travel Weekly
29 minutes ago
- Travel Weekly
How Regent's Seven Seas Grandeur stacks up
Richard Turen I've recently returned from a 12-day British Isles cruise out of Southampton on the Seven Seas Grandeur, the newest Explorer-class ship in the Regent Seven Seas Cruises fleet. I looked for the Picasso print in a public restroom, and I stood transfixed by the most stylish main dining room on any ship I have ever sailed, a space that features lovely contoured arches and degrees of dining separation that should earn at least one of the architectural firms that worked on this project some sort of industry award. The design features carried over into public spaces and the specialty restaurants to a degree that it might be a good idea for other ship designers to sail the Grandeur before taking pen to paper or fingers to AI design kits. Related story: The little things add up on Regent's Seven Seas Grandeur But this is reading like a PR piece, and that is not what I do. This was our family's second Signature vacation of the year, and we were accompanied by 28 extremely well-traveled clients, many of whom have achieved our Cruise Ship Inspector status. That means they have been trained and are qualified to review all aspects of a ship's operations. They complete the same forms that Angela and I use to take notes so that no aspect of a ship's services is overlooked. I had some excellent research from this group, which, in general, matched my opinions of what we had experienced. Let me summarize just a few of my opinions about our experience aboard Regent's newest ship: • Regent remains among the top five or six cruise lines in the world. Its uniqueness is centered on numerous inclusions like shore excursions and an absence of specialty dining surcharges. • Many of your clients will prefer Regent to the competition simply because their dress rules cater to an American audience. There are no formal nights on any cruise of less than 16 nights. Often, the sale is completed when this fact is mentioned. I laugh when I think about formal nights on Alaska cruises. How many of the wilderness houses one sees along the Inside Passage are owned by people who have a suit hanging in the closet? In a way, Regent just "gets it" in ways many of their competitors do not. They score No. 1 in the They Get It category. • I have mentioned to a number of cruise executives that any rankings I am associated with will never grant five-star status to any line that does not address onboard guests by name. That is a great point of differentiation and one of the reasons I have not previously felt that Regent was a five-star product. That has now changed. Staff is using iPads to write down guest requests, and they are being recorded for future use. • There were many pluses and minuses in the cuisine category. Pacific Rim may be the finest Asian restaurant at sea. Don't leave this surprise hit without sampling the duck rolls and the lobster tempura. But the contemporary French eatery Chartreuse was an ongoing disappointment. I don't quite understand why escargot is served as a kind of colorful fried meatball. My haddock was a hamburger-shaped piece of fried fish atop a small plateau of olives, looking to escape. • Services on the open decks and in several lounges were largely impersonal, with staff often unable to engage in conversation. This was not the case in the restaurants. All in all, the Regent experience was a major plus for our guests. When you are seeking to be the casual, high-end contemporary option competing with more formalized stalwarts, you play the game with some distinct consumer advantages. Next column, some port talk.
Yahoo
an hour ago
- Yahoo
Is Annaly Capital Stock a Millionaire Maker?
Annaly Capital increased its dividend at the start of 2025. The mortgage REIT has a huge 14%+ dividend yield. Make sure you understand what you are buying before you chase Annaly's lofty yield. 10 stocks we like better than Annaly Capital Management › Annaly Capital Management (NYSE: NLY) has an enticing 14%+ dividend yield backed by a dividend that was just increased. Some on Wall Street believe that the safest dividends are those that have just been raised. But don't let greed drive your decision-making; there's more to know about Annaly than just the size of its dividend yield if you want to become a millionaire someday. Annaly Capital is a real estate investment trust (REIT). However, unlike most REITs, it doesn't purchase properties. Traditional REITs essentially do what you would do if you owned a rental property, but they do it on an institutional scale. Annaly buys mortgages that have been pooled into bond-like securities. This is a vastly different business model, one that would be very hard for a small investor to replicate in any way. Essentially, Annaly aims to earn the difference between the interest it earns from the mortgage securities it buys and its costs. Those costs include general operating expenses, as well as the cost of leverage. A significant portion of the leverage Annaly uses amounts to loans backed by the mortgage securities it owns. This is not a low-risk business. Moreover, unlike a physical property, mortgage securities trade all day long, leading to swift changes in the value of the portfolio. Factors such as interest rates, housing market dynamics, and even mortgage repayment rates can impact mortgage security prices. It would be hard for most investors even to track what's going on here. Basically, mortgage REITs (mREITs) like Annaly should probably be owned only by more active and perhaps more aggressive investors -- notice that statement didn't include dividend investors. If you are trying to build wealth with dividend stocks, Annaly won't be a good fit for your portfolio. The chart above shows you all you need to know. The orange line is the annual dividend, which has been highly volatile. And up until the recent increase, it had been heading lower for years. The purple line is the stock price, which has been just as volatile as the dividend, and it, too, has been trending lower for years. A lofty dividend yield hasn't translated into a reliable and perhaps growing income stream, which is what most long-term dividend investors are really looking for. But there's an important nuance here, as Annaly Capital isn't actually focused on the dividend per se; it's focused on generating total return. That assumes that dividends get reinvested, not spent on daily living expenses. If you are focused on total return, Annaly has been a win. Notice in the chart above that its total return has kept pace with that of the S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) over time. But the two don't move in lockstep, which makes Annaly an interesting candidate for adding to an asset allocation model, as it offers attractive diversification potential. While dividend investors may not find Annaly to their liking, asset allocators may like it a great deal. Annaly Capital's ability to help you reach millionaire status depends greatly on what you are trying to achieve when you buy a stock. If the goal is to generate a reliable and growing income stream, even if you aren't yet using that income, history suggests that Annaly will likely be a big letdown. It just isn't focused on that goal. However, if you are laser-focused on total return and like to have a portfolio diversified across different asset classes, this mREIT could be right up your alley. Just go in knowing that dividend reinvestment is what lets Annaly meet its total return goal. Before you buy stock in Annaly Capital Management, consider this: The Motley Fool Stock Advisor analyst team just identified what they believe are the for investors to buy now… and Annaly Capital Management wasn't one of them. The 10 stocks that made the cut could produce monster returns in the coming years. Consider when Netflix made this list on December 17, 2004... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $671,477!* Or when Nvidia made this list on April 15, 2005... if you invested $1,000 at the time of our recommendation, you'd have $1,010,880!* Now, it's worth noting Stock Advisor's total average return is 1,047% — a market-crushing outperformance compared to 180% for the S&P 500. Don't miss out on the latest top 10 list, available when you join . See the 10 stocks » *Stock Advisor returns as of July 7, 2025 Reuben Gregg Brewer has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy. Is Annaly Capital Stock a Millionaire Maker? was originally published by The Motley Fool Error in retrieving data Sign in to access your portfolio Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data Error in retrieving data