Investors from 45 countries surveyed at the JPMorgan Global Markets Conference this month revealed a bullish lean toward Europe, with 36% anticipating European equities to be the best-performing asset in 2025.
That’s compared to 17% who are betting on US stocks to dominate.
“There were mixed views on the outlook for the US economy, even if recession is no longer the base case, and investor sentiment was not as positive on growth as risk market trading suggests,” a team of JPMorgan analysts wrote last week.
The report, involving 700 investors from 45 countries, adds to other signs indicating that global investors have turned cautious on US markets after years of outperformance.
While US equities have drawn heavy foreign investor flows as the market rallied in the last few years, high valuations, AI disruptions, and massive policy and data jitters have shaken faith in “US exceptionalism.”
Meanwhile, new tailwinds are emerging for the European market, and investors have flocked to the region’s stock market. The Stoxx Europe 600 is up 7% for the year, while the S&P 500 is down about 1%.
However, though the stark difference in performance between the two markets may boost pro-European arguments, several Wall Street forecasters have cautioned against dumping US assets.
Morgan Stanley recently projected that American dominance will remain intact through at least 2026, as near-term volatility gives way to improved earnings sentiment, continued AI gains, and accommodating policy boosts. In its view, slowing growth will not trigger a recession.
Goldman Sachs, meanwhile, suggested that US mega-caps will outperform again this year — the so-called Magnificent Seven stocks have been the S&P 500’s main growth engine since 2023, and are trading at discounted valuations that investors will lean into, the bank said.
For now, uncertain will remain until the market gets more clarity on everything from interest rates, recession odds, trade deals, and geopolitical developments. JPMorgan offered some takeaways from the conference on key issues:
As sovereign wealth funds and reserve managers rethink Treasury holdings, gold stands to benefit, JPMorgan said.
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