Fidelity: The case for quality in Europe as US exceptionalism fades

Fidelity: The case for quality in Europe as US exceptionalism fades

Europe

Against a backdrop of fiscal stimulus and potential greater European policy coordination, European investors are increasingly looking to domestic markets for opportunities as the case for continued US exceptionalism fades. Fred Sykes, European Equities Portfolio Manager at Fidelity International, examines why a focus on quality companies in Europe with strong defensive characteristics can help navigate an uncertain market environment and position investors for long-term outperformance.

Recent policy announcements from the US have served as a wake-up call for Europe, sparking a need for greater continental unity and policy coordination. This is most evident in defence spending, but it is also clear that the region needs to improve productivity. Germany’s new parliament has approved plans to reform the country’s constitutional debt brake, thus removing constraints on defence spending and paving the way for the creation of a €500bn infrastructure investment fund. This would equate to 11.6% of Germany’s 2024 Gross Domestic Product (GDP)1, to be spent in the coming 10 years. The European Council has also approved a proposal to exempt defence spending from the EU’s fiscal rules and to set up a €150bn EU loan facility to fund military expenditure2.

This stimulation of the European economy has been very positively received, particularly as US tariff uncertainty threatens to impact the region’s exports of goods. While the impact from tariffs will still be felt, it is encouraging that Europe is putting some self-help measures in place. If these policies are supplemented by the implementation of the recommendations outlined in the Draghi report on cutting red tape and bureaucracy, it could bring a further boost as the region addresses structural inefficiencies that have long hindered competitiveness.

These developments suggest progress toward greater European integration, moving beyond monetary union and freedom of movement toward more comprehensive policy coordination. While this still may be the holy grail, any shift in the right direction from a low starting base could unlock significant economic benefits, particularly if European investors mobilise record-high savings rates currently parked in low-yielding cash and real estate investments.

Markets have already begun to recognise this potential, particularly as investor sentiment shifts away from US exceptionalism. Concerns about US growth and policy uncertainty are driving unprecedented capital flows towards European markets which have demonstrated notable resilience in 2025, outperforming global counterparts.

Identifying quality opportunities

While these policy changes create a supportive environment, it’s worth noting that European companies are not proxies for Europe’s economy. Two-thirds of benchmark revenues from European companies originate outside the region, with the rest of the world eager buyers of European goods and services that in many cases are best in class and compete successfully on the global stage. Longer-term equity returns are primarily driven by real dividend and earnings growth, not regional economic growth. Even after the recent rally, European markets continue to trade at significant discount to US counterparts. The combination of attractive valuations and improving fundamentals creates favourable risk-adjusted return potential for quality-focused investors.

European valuations are relatively attractive

Identifying the most compelling opportunities in this environment requires focusing on companies with specific quality characteristics. Quality businesses are characterised by several key attributes, including stable or growing end markets without excessive sensitivity to external variables such as the macro environment. They also tend to have clear business models, strong competitive positions and a sensible balance sheet structure with conservative use of debt providing the flexibility to fund sustainable dividend growth.

Dividend growth can be the key to long-term success

Finding durable business models and the management teams who share our point of view on capital allocation become the two principal determinants of success in the long-term. Companies with a consistent dividend policy represent healthy businesses with stable earnings growth and strong free cash flows, characteristics consistently rewarded by markets over time. This dividend focus serves as both an income generator and a quality screen, while maintaining defensive characteristics during market downturns.

3i Group is an example of a company that demonstrates the kind of quality characteristics we seek. 3i’s largest asset is discount retailer, Action. Action has very high returns on capital and is a rare business in that it gets stronger as it gets bigger as it consistently passes on to customers the benefits of its huge purchasing power in the form of lower prices.

Amadeus, a Spanish booking platform and IT solutions company for the hotel and airline industries, is another example of a company with quality characteristics and strong upside potential. The company has made substantial investments to widen its lead over competitors, achieving its strongest competitive position in years across all divisions. The stock is well placed to benefit from this reinvestment cycle over the next five years, with expectations of expanding margins and robust free cash flow growth.

Another example is Finnish lift manufacturer Kone. While the company has some exposure to cyclical areas such as original equipment and construction, the majority of profits is derived from maintenance of the existing installed lift base. This maintenance business is regulated, providing greater stability and visibility of returns over time across different macroeconomic scenarios.

A compelling opportunity

Europe presents a compelling opportunity for quality-focused investors willing to take a long-term view. The combination of structural policy improvements, attractive valuations relative to other regions and access to world-class companies with global revenue exposure creates a favourable investment environment. The external pressures facing Europe have catalysed positive changes that could drive GDP growth and lessen the productivity gap with the US over the next five to 10 years. While tariffs and recession risks could temporarily disrupt this trajectory, the underlying structural improvements appear sustainable.