The traditional debate between investing in cyclical or value stocks is irrelevant in the current European market. With stock-level dispersion consistently rising, the real opportunity lies in meticulous stock selection, which offers a better path to alpha than broad macro sector bets.
Daniel Gladys argues that as passive investing grows, fewer participants focus on fundamentals. This widens the gap between a stock's price and its intrinsic value, creating a favorable environment for disciplined value investors who can identify these overlooked opportunities.
For the first time in a decade, European equities have broken out of their constantly widening valuation discount range compared to the US. Historically, such breakouts have signaled the beginning of a long-term upward trend where the valuation gap narrows significantly.
Contrary to the dominant narrative focused on US tech giants, data shows European banks and a global deep value approach have outperformed the 'Mag 7' over the last one, three, and five years. This highlights the importance of looking beyond popular headlines for actual investment performance.
Over the past two decades, equity analysis has evolved beyond simply valuing a company's physical or financial assets. The modern approach focuses on identifying "alpha" factors—trading baskets of stocks grouped by shared characteristics like strong balance sheets or non-US revenue exposure.
Many commodity funds make bold macro predictions (e.g., on inflation) but take timid, diversified equity positions. A superior strategy is the reverse: maintain a neutral macro view while making concentrated, 'bold' bets on specific companies with powerful operational catalysts that generate alpha regardless of the macro environment.
An average stock's return is dictated more by external forces than company performance: 40% by the market and 30% by its sector, with only 30% attributable to idiosyncratic factors. This means correctly identifying a winning sector is nearly as valuable as picking the best stock within it.
Europe's primary AI bull case is not in creating foundational AI but in its large base of "AI adopters." These firms, a quarter of the index, show strong earnings outperformance and trade at a significant 27% discount to US equivalents, presenting a unique investment angle.
For the first time in a decade, European equities have broken out of their long-term trend of a widening valuation discount versus the US. Historically, such breakouts signal the beginning of a sustained, multi-year period where this valuation gap narrows significantly from its current 23%.
The top investment idea for the year is European equities, specifically quality stocks. This is based on a favorable combination of accelerating earnings growth, supportive fiscal and monetary policy, and more attractive valuations compared to US markets, particularly when analyzing EPS growth plus dividend yield versus P/E multiples.
Europe's headline earnings growth is dragged down by specific sectors: autos, chemicals, luxury, transport, and food & beverage. These "old economy" cyclicals suffer from weak demand in China and rising competition from Chinese firms, making avoidance of these areas a key strategy.