Make European Equities Great Again… [here comes the breakout]

Europe has been dismissed and ignored by investors for a long time.

But don’t ignore this big breakout.

As I mentioned earlier this year, there are several factors lining up for “MEEGA“ [Make European Equities Great Again] — still cheap valuations, lingering excess pessimism, monetary tailwinds, political drift to the right/business-friendly governments, reforms program, fiscal stimulus, and the prospect of global growth reacceleration into 2026.

But above all, this week’s chart shows a big, beautiful breakout to new All-Time Highs (only took 25 years(!!)).

I’ve recently documented several other big breakouts currently underway (e.g. developed market ex-US equities, emerging markets equal-weighted index, China tech stocks, global commodity stocks, and global renewable energy stocks) — so this one has good company, and I always say when you get a clean clear breakout like this after such a prolonged period of base-building you have to pay attention and it’s anyone’s guess as to how far it goes.

This is the time when you need to think independently, ignore the old consensus narratives & common wisdoms, and pay more attention to what price is telling us and what’s not being talked about…

Euro Stoxx 50 Chart

Key point: European equities have broken out to new all-time highs (after 25 years).

Bonus Chart – Further Perspective…

Another interesting angle on it is the CPI adjusted which —while looking less impressive than the chart above— has likewise undertaken a fairly compelling breakout also (albeit a very long way to go until new ATH on this one).

The Stoxx50 vs S&P 500 view is less impressive still, with the relative strength line still bouncing along the bottom.

Overall, with the adjusted + relative strength picture still looking early, sentiment still middling, and valuations (particularly relative value) still cheap, I would say there is plenty of room to run here in the chart above.Euro Stoxx 50 vs S&P 500

Hidden Bonus Chart

Only for the gentlemen and scholars who scrolled all the way to the end, this last one goes to show that European Equities used to be at least as good as US Equities.

But something(s) changed in 2009.

One issue was that Europe had to deal with the hangover from the credit boom, with rolling sovereign debt crises and structurally lower growth as it digested years of malinvestment and deleveraging.

The USA, on the other hand, saw a decade+ of super-easy monetary policy + struck “tech stock oil” (and actual oil with the shale boom, and now “AI oil”). While it’s hard to see the USA coming unstuck or Europe striking its own oil, the thing to keep in mind is that the narrative and story usually only becomes obvious after price has moved… (a good final thought to muse on!)US vs European Equities

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