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European Banking Group Keeps Faith In US Stocks; Also Likes Emerging Markets

Amanda Cheesley

5 December 2025

One of Europe's largest banks, ABN AMRO, still likes US stocks despite a few concerns on the economic picture.

Christophe Boucher, chief investment officer at Paris-headquartered ABN AMRO Investment Solutions, the asset management arm of Netherlands-headquartered ABN AMRO, said the firm is overweight in US and emerging market equities, notably tech.

“The US continues to exhibit solid momentum, supported by resilient consumption that is driven by higher-income households, despite a slowdown in the US labor market,” he said at the media event attended by this news service. He believes that there will be 3 to 4 per cent GDP growth in the US next year. “Europe, by contrast, remains stuck in a softer growth trajectory, hampered by structural weaknesses and persistent political uncertainty,” he continued.  

At the event, Benoît Begoc, quantitative strategist at ABN AMRO Investment Solutions, highlighted that the European Central Bank does not appear ready to cut interest rates anytime soon. Given downward-skewed inflation and persistently weak growth, Begoc views this as overly cautious and a mistake.

Although the EU and Germany agreed to hike defense spending earlier in the year, causing stocks to rise, the market has already priced this in. Begoc believes that rates are exerting excessive pressure on the manufacturing sector, in particular, which continues to struggle, reflecting a structural stress. “A rate cut would also help to bring down the high level of household savings, which is holding back domestic demand, and would boost consumption,” he said.

By contrast, Boucher and Begoc are positive about emerging markets, which have been outperforming their developed market peers, exhibiting stronger growth. Boucher emphasized how 2025 was a star year for emerging markets, with the index delivering nearly double the performance of the US equity market in dollar terms. He expects this trend to continue in 2026 as the region continues to experience growth that is outpacing developed ones, benefiting from improved financial stability, a weaker dollar, and cheap valuations. Boucher thinks emerging markets remain an attractive asset class, trading at a significant discount, around 40 per cent below developed markets, and offering an effective way to diversify in an increasingly concentrated market.

A raft of wealth management firms are seeking to explain their asset allocation and investment positioning for the coming year. One prominent concern is whether high valuations of US big technology firms, especially those involved in AI, are sustainable.

Asset allocation
Boucher believes the environment remains supportive of equities. He is overweight in emerging market and US equities, notably tech. He highlighted that the Magnificent 7 – Alphabet, Amazon, Apple, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia, Tesla – made a comeback earlier in the year, surpassing all other assets apart from gold, with +18 per cent since the end of June. Meanwhile, he remains skeptical of European equities and is neutral on Japan.

Boucher also likes emerging market debt. He prefers high yield over investment-grade credit, especially in Europe, where attractive carry is supported by stronger credit quality than in the US. He is the most underweight in government bonds.

German asset manager DWS also maintains a preference for US equities in 2026. See here. Meanwhile, a number of wealth managers have come out recently in favor of emerging markets and Asia this year, for instance Ninety One, Aberdeen Investments, Paris-based Amundi, Carmignac and Indosuez, as well as GIB Asset Management and Franklin Templeton. See more here and here.

ESG investing
A lot of capital is going into AI. Data centres require access to power and water, consuming equivalent water to about 100,000 homes, creating investment opportunities for infrastructure in renewable energy and water. Although investment managers like Edmond de Rothschild Asset Management remain confident in ESG-focused investments in the long-term, Boucher finds demand for ESG-focused investments has fallen compared to 2 to 3 years ago. He highlighted that ESG equity portfolios have underperformed in the last 5 years. The ESG backlash is not only in the US, driven by the oil lobby, though more significant, he said. “The current review of the EU’s Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation is creating uncertainty. It's also painful if defence cannot be included in an ESG portfolio. Also alot of companies being invested in are only transitioning to renewables. We have debates too about China's tech and gaming multinational Tencent over whether it is a good or bad player in terms of ESG,” he added.

Mathilde Dufour, head of research at Mirova, a subsidiary of Paris-based Natixis IM focused on sustainable investing, has also stressed the importance of both defense and ESG-focused investments. “They are not contradictory,” she told this news service recently. “Sustainable finance has to be used to finance what is useful for society,” she said. “It’s about investing in all areas. We have to invest in security.”  However, Dufour emphasised the need to clarify rules on what types of weapons should be considered controversial and which ones should be excluded from ESG-focused investments. “We do not hold defence stocks in our portfolios as we need clearer rules on ESG and defence investing. We only have funds covered by Article 9 under the EU’s Sustainable Finance Disclosure Regulation ,” she said. See here. Nevertheless, Boucher emphasized that ESG-focused investments in fixed income can deliver more alpha. See more here and here about ESG investing and AI.