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The views expressed are those of the authors at the time of writing. Other teams may hold different views and make different investment decisions. The value of your investment may become worth more or less than at the time of original investment. While any third-party data used is considered reliable, its accuracy is not guaranteed.
European equity markets are witnessing heightened performance dispersion across countries, sectors and individual stocks as the region seeks to get to grips with an uncertain and fast-evolving global landscape.
In an environment of intrinsic uncertainty driven by geopolitical instability, deglobalisation and an unfolding AI revolution, we think active, research-driven investors are well-positioned to identify opportunities that others may overlook — even more so if they are willing to take a contrarian approach and look beyond short-term volatility and macro headlines to uncover companies with long-term earnings potential that the market is currently missing.
In our view, Europe’s structural transition presents a particularly compelling opportunity for a contrarian investment philosophy. For us, the key elements of building a resilient, core European equity portfolio to navigate today’s new economic era include:
We advocate a focus on companies where the market is pricing in negative earnings revisions indefinitely, despite their solid fundamentals and the potential for long-term growth. That means uncovering durable business models that have the financial resilience to weather cyclical downturns and benefit from secular trends.
In practice, we think investors should start by homing in on the opportunity set. In our process, for instance, we screen for signs of mispricing to identify companies that have experienced significant share price declines and negative earnings revisions, but where the pace of negative earnings revisions is slowing, which can signal a potential turning point. We look at around 200 to 300 names and assess:
We revisit the investment thesis regularly, using a detailed checklist-based process to ensure each company continues to execute as expected and remains on an upward trajectory.
In our view, understanding and aligning with the longer-term factors that drive performance is key to the potential success of our investment approach. The rapid changes currently occurring in Europe make this even more essential. For instance, our research has identified a number of companies in the food and building materials sectors that we believe stand to benefit from long-term structural drivers such as shifting consumer demand patterns, regulatory changes that enhance growth potential and company-specific advantages like leadership in R&D.
The food sector is undergoing a major transformation, and we see significant opportunities in underappreciated food ingredient companies where the likely ongoing dramatic rise in diabetes cases (Figure 1) should continue to drive innovation and demand.
We’ve invested, for example, in a global leader in low-calorie sweeteners and added fibre — products that support healthier lifestyles and help reduce the risk of diabetes. Over the past five years, this company’s innovations have enabled the removal of 9 million tons of sugar from global diets, which is equivalent to 36 trillion calories. We expect sustained demand for healthier ingredients to drive its ongoing, long-term growth.
Figure 1
In the building materials sector, stricter building regulations and the pressing need for improved energy efficiency and climate-resilient infrastructure are driving significant investment. Between 2021 and 2027, for example, the EU has allocated over €100 billion to various programmes aimed at improving buildings’ energy efficiency.1 The sector also has a vital role in helping to address housing shortages across many European countries, including France, Germany and the UK, and will undoubtedly benefit from increased construction volumes as demand rises.
Through our research, we’ve identified a leading manufacturer of plastic piping systems used in residential, commercial and infrastructure projects. The company also provides ventilation and water infrastructure solutions. We believe it is well-positioned to benefit from a recovery in housebuilding activity and the growing adoption of piping systems for indirect heating — an approach aimed at lowering energy consumption, and one that requires enhanced ventilation.
These examples illustrate the breadth of opportunities we’re seeing in attractively valued European equities with strong structural tailwinds and solid fundamentals. Above all, a long-term mindset is essential. Identifying quality companies that are temporarily out of favour requires the patience to hold them through periods of market dislocation until fundamentals and sentiment align. For investors willing to look through today’s volatility, we believe the rewards of a contrarian, bottom-up approach will be well worth the wait.
1 “Financing for Building Renovations,” European Commission, Directorate-General for Energy, September 2025.
Past results are not necessarily indicative of future results and an investment can lose value. Funds returns are shown net of fees. Source: Wellington Management
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