HomeNewsOpinionMarket Turmoil: S&P always looks good next to European stocks

Market Turmoil: S&P always looks good next to European stocks

August’s turmoil hit a weak European stock market that’s delivered a bittersweet earnings season. The region’s firms are feeling pressure from East and West

August 08, 2024 / 11:48 IST
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S&P
The Stoxx Europe 600 index is now only just in positive territory this year, while the S&P 500 is still up around 10%.

When markets gyrated at the turn of the month, US and Japanese stocks had the cushion of an earlier surge to fall back on. In Europe, the rout hit share prices that had been weakening since May. An earnings season dominated by pessimism from many of the region’s bosses has vindicated investors’ caution.

The change in tone is stark after first-quarter results statements had sounded encouraging. The European Central Bank’s rate cut in June also underpinned expectations that the region might be on the cusp of an economic upturn, even as investors digested political surprises in France. But before the mid-year reporting season even started, a spate of profit warnings reset the mood — notably from industrial firms including Airbus SE and Carl Zeiss Meditec AG and consumer-facing companies such as Burberry Group Plc, H&M Hennes & Mauritz AB and Deutsche Lufthansa AG. These were to prove a taste of worse to come.

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European corporations didn’t perform that badly in the second three months of the year. They’re generally growing sales again after several successive quarters of declines. Profit margins also have been strong. So when it comes to earnings, more companies have beaten forecasts than missed them. The financial services sector has led these positive surprises.

But the comments on the outlook have given pause. The repeated message is that customer demand is weak, in particular from China — a key market for the luxury, automotive, semiconductor, chemicals and commodities industries. With the US slowing too, “the nascent European recovery is vulnerable, again, to external forces,” analysts at UBS Group AG warned last month. That pattern is clear in the stark underperformance of UBS’s index of China-exposed European stocks, including luxury and automotive firms.