Euro Equities Have Lost Their Va-Va-Voom

European stocks started the year much stronger than their US peers but the tantalizing prospect of the euro area clawing back some of its persistent gap in earnings growth, and the higher company valuations that come with it, looks to have slipped through its grasp again.

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Europe’s proximity to both the Iran and Ukraine wars means its equity market can’t catch a break. A first look at April’s economic data shows the impact of the Gulf conflict is showing up starkly. International investors have too many incentives to look elsewhere.

The euro-area economy is again on the cusp of recession, as a blockade of the Strait of Hormuz — a vital waterway for oil from the Gulf — leaves it more vulnerable to soaring energy prices. Euro-area purchasing managers’ indexes, a measure of business activity, were uniformly poor in April, removing vestiges of hope that the economic from the Iran war will be glancing. The composite measure fell more than forecast to 48.6, a 17-month low. Worse, a measure of raw material input prices jumped to 76.9 from 68.9 in March and selling prices rose to 68.4 from 65.3. This is evidence of the recent energy-price impact.

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Germany was the worst hit, with a four percentage-point drop in its services sector PMI to 46.9, well below the 50 line that separates growth from contraction. Manufacturing has held up better but this may be driven by stockpiling of inventories in anticipation of expected supply bottlenecks. At least there’s some realism from the German government, which has halved its 2026 growth estimate to 0.5%.