Many non-US companies are growing as fast as the Magnificent 7, offer significantly higher dividend yields (7-8x), and trade at a 30-50% valuation discount. This represents a rare cost-benefit opportunity that investors, who typically apply such analysis to every other purchase, ignore in the stock market.
While international markets have more volatility and lower trust, their biggest advantage is inefficiency. Many basic services are underdeveloped, creating enormous 'low-hanging fruit' opportunities. Providing a great, reliable service in a market where few things work well can create immense and durable value.
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.
Historically, US earnings outgrew the world by 1%. Post-GFC, this widened to 3%. Investors have extrapolated this recent, higher rate as the new normal, pushing the US CAPE ratio to nearly double that of non-US markets. This represents a historically extreme valuation based on a potentially temporary growth advantage.
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.
A powerful EM strategy involves identifying businesses with proven, powerful models from developed markets, like American Tower. Local EM investor bases may not be familiar with the model's potential, creating an opportunity to buy these companies at a displaced valuation before their predictable results drive multiple expansion.
Countries like Poland, which transitioned to capitalism relatively recently, are under-followed by global investors. This creates opportunities to find "boring compounder" stocks, such as supermarket chain Dino Polska, at attractive valuations. These businesses are often run by outsider CEOs and are insulated from global hype cycles like AI.
Financial models struggle to project sustained high growth rates (>30% YoY). Analysts naturally revert to the mean, causing them to undervalue companies that defy this and maintain high growth for years, creating an opportunity for investors who spot this persistence.
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.
The high valuations of mega-cap tech stocks are predicated on the idea that their growth is unique. However, data shows numerous companies, both in the U.S. and internationally, are growing at similar or even faster rates. This competition for growth should logically put downward pressure on the Mag-7's multiples, a key tenet of a bubble.
Exor, an Italian holding company, owns 20% of Ferrari. Due to a deep conglomerate discount, Exor's entire market cap is less than the value of its Ferrari stake alone, effectively offering Ferrari shares at a steep discount plus other businesses for free.