Morgan Stanley flags pause in European equities, sees stock pickers market
Morgan Stanley sees a tactical pause in European equities, warning sentiment is stretched and expecting choppy trading, while favouring stock picking with energy, banks and utilities outperforming.
Summary:
- Morgan Stanley flags tactical pause in European equities
- Near-term choppiness expected during earnings season
- Sentiment seen as stretched after recent rally
- Optimism on Hormuz risks may be overdone
- Earnings dispersion supports stock picking
- Energy, banks, utilities seen as outperformers
- Luxury, autos, staples face higher miss risk
Morgan Stanley is flagging a near-term slowdown in the rally across European equities, warning that markets may struggle to maintain recent momentum as earnings season unfolds.
While the broader outlook remains constructive over the medium term, analysts expects a period of volatility at the index level, with sentiment having run ahead of fundamentals. In her view, investor positioning has become stretched, increasing the likelihood of a tactical pause rather than a continuation of the recent upswing.
A key driver behind this shift is the market’s increasingly optimistic stance on geopolitical risks, particularly expectations around a resolution to disruptions in the Strait of Hormuz. Morgan Stanley suggests that investors have already priced in a relatively benign outcome, leaving markets vulnerable if reality falls short of those assumptions.
That said, the environment may become more favourable beneath the surface. Rather than broad index gains, Morgan Stanley sees a transition toward stock-specific performance as the dominant theme through earnings season. Consensus earnings forecasts for MSCI Europe are trending higher, while dispersion between individual stocks is elevated, creating a more attractive backdrop for active stock selection.
Against this backdrop, sector dynamics are expected to diverge. Morgan Stanley highlights energy, utilities, banks and telecoms as areas with the strongest potential for earnings beats, positioning them as relative winners in the current reporting cycle.
By contrast, the outlook appears more challenging for sectors such as luxury, autos and consumer staples, where expectations may prove harder to meet. Analysts suggest investors should be more selective in these areas, as the risk of earnings disappointments is skewed higher.
Overall, the call points to a market shifting away from broad-based gains toward a more fragmented, stock-driven phase, with heightened volatility likely as earnings results test elevated expectations.
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.