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Global Multi-Strategy Fund
Investors are at best lukewarm when it comes to Europe. True, European equities outperformed the US market in 2025, but overall sentiment remains weak as Europe has been a source of recurring disappointment. However, we think repeated false dawns should not stop investors from considering what could go right and exploring how that could alter their overall portfolio positioning. From a multi-asset perspective, the investment case for Europe today is twofold:
However, risks have not disappeared. On the contrary, Europe remains fragile in several areas. But taken together, the narrative looks more constructive.
For most of the last decade, Europe was shaped by a deflationary mindset. Growth was weak, fiscal policy was tight and companies tended to focus on balance-sheet repair rather than expansion. This context became self-reinforcing and weighed on confidence.
What is different now is that we are not only seeing an improving cycle but also accelerating regime change.
The cyclical outlook for the euro area is continuing to improve gradually. Growth indicators are lifting, supported by relatively loose financial conditions and a more expansionary fiscal stance. External headwinds — notably US tariffs and threats in relation to Greenland, the continued war in Ukraine and Chinese trade policies — remain a drag but have, so far, been manageable. And while still too slow, progress is being made in tackling some of the structural inefficiencies that are holding Europe back.
This regime shift is occurring against a backdrop of a recovery in European banking. European banks were hit hard by the global financial crisis as well as the subsequent eurozone crisis, with a major knock-on effect on the wider economy given banks’ role as the Continent’s key financing conduit. Conversely, they are now bellwethers of Europe’s gradual turnaround, reflecting a more stable macro environment where lending is recovering, interest rates have been cut but remain far from the low levels of the 2010s and domestic activity is improving.
Europe is not leading the AI race in terms of foundational models, platforms or hardware. But this does not mean AI is irrelevant for European equities. The next stage of AI development is not just about who builds the technology, but who uses it effectively. And according to Microsoft’s latest AI Diffusion Report1, Europe is well ahead in adoption.
Many European companies are large incumbents with data, scale and established customer bases that can be harnessed. For them, AI is less about disruption and more about improving efficiency, reducing costs and supporting margins.
Pricing power is the important variable to watch here. Companies that can adopt AI while maintaining pricing discipline are more likely to translate productivity gains into earnings. Those without pricing power risk passing the benefits to customers instead.
AI adoption is still in its early phases, and the evidence of return on investment is gradual. But over time, this could become one of the more meaningful positive forces for Europe, especially given the relatively low starting point in productivity.
One of the clearest step changes we’re seeing in European policy is a focus on strategic autonomy. Defence spending, energy security, grid investment and strategic supply chains are all part of this agenda. Beyond the spending itself, the challenge is coordination and speed. However, it is likely that external challenges (for instance, the US wanting to acquire Greenland) will accelerate this regime shift.
This is where recommendations put forward by former European Central Bank President Mario Draghi are relevant. His report on “The future of European competitiveness”2 highlights well-known weaknesses such as fragmentation, slow decision-making and compartmentalised capital markets. Crucially, it frames them as urgent economic risks rather than long-term aspirations. So far, progress has been uneven,3 but any acceleration in implementation would materially improve Europe’s ability to translate strategic ambition into growth. Areas with the greatest potential include:
At the same time, Europe still faces significant structural impediments. Most notably:
Intensifying competition from China
One of the most underestimated constraints on European earnings is not domestic demand but global competition. Chinese manufacturers, in particular, are continuing to increase pressure across many industrial segments, often with aggressive pricing and scale advantages.
This matters for Europe because the equity market is heavily exposed to mature industrial sectors, where margins are sensitive to competition and differentiation is difficult. Even when direct revenue exposure to China is limited, the indirect impact on pricing and market share can be significant.
While we are seeing tentative signs that Europe is willing to counter these competitive threats with more robust and coordinated industrial policies, it will not be an easy fix. This structural risk could limit the potential for a broad rebound in European earnings.
Growing demographic pressures
A rapidly ageing population is both increasingly constraining public finances through higher pension and health care expenditure and curbing labour supply amid a political backlash against further immigration. Public finance constraints could limit necessary investment, while labour shortages may translate into higher inflation and reduce competitiveness.
Critical developments to watch here include:
Geopolitical uncertainty
Europe’s open economy and export-led companies are particularly vulnerable to geopolitical uncertainty given the region’s reliance on both energy imports and the US security umbrella. Historically, moments of crisis have acted as catalysts for Europe to advance. Political fragmentation and the rise of eurosceptic right-wing parties are major obstacles to meaningful breakthroughs this time, but growing tensions with the US and China could still precipitate greater cohesion and reform.
1 “Global AI adoption in 2025”, Microsoft AI Economy Institute, 8 January 2026. | 2Mario Draghi “The future of European competitiveness”, European Commission, September 2024. | 3“One year after the Draghi report”, European Commission, September 2025. | 4“The Single Market: our European home market in an uncertain world”, European Commission, 21 May 2025.
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. For professional, institutional or accredited investors only.
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