Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility Margin Resilience Is Key
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Margin resilience is key

Margin resilience is key

This year U.S. equities have underperformed the rest of the world due largely to policy uncertainty. However, an important driver of U.S. equity outperformance over the longer term has been stronger earnings and profit margins relative to peers, and our view is these factors will continue to drive long-term U.S. exceptionalism.
 

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U.S. equities have had a challenging first half of the year, underperforming the rest of the world. A primary cause of this underperformance has been higher policy uncertainty and concerns about the impact of higher tariffs on growth.

While policy uncertainty can impact short-term volatility and lead to temporary underperformance, what does this mean for returns over the long term? An important driver of long-term returns is earnings and profit margins, where the U.S. has continued to outperform. In fact, since 2010 margins increased 6.4% to 13.5% as compared to a 2.7% increase in Europe to 10.1%. The difference between U.S. and European margins is now 3.4%, near the highest in history.

Additionally, technology leadership and increased adoption of artificial intelligence (AI) across diverse industries will likely support the continued expansion of U.S. margins, allowing them to surpass the rest of the world. Considering the many ways AI can improve profit margins for businesses, we anticipate that 2025 S&P 500 earnings per share will come in at $260-$270, demonstrating positive growth of roughly 8% as strong earnings and margin expansion continue to drive U.S. exceptionalism into the future.

VERWANDTE THEMEN
Earnings breadth still improving
Chart of the week | Makroökonomisch

Rising earnings estimates continue to support equities despite geopolitical and macroeconomic uncertainty. With profit growth broadening across S&P 500 industries, resilient corporate earnings underpin our constructive outlook for the stock market.

Global momentum in manufacturing
Chart of the week | Makroökonomisch

April PMIs (Purchasing Managers’ Indices) point to a meaningful improvement in global manufacturing momentum, with the U.S., Eurozone and Japan all posting stronger-than-expected and firmly expansionary results. The breadth of the rebound suggests improving global demand, supporting a constructive outlook for growth despite ongoing geopolitical tensions.

Tracking the margin uptrend
Chart of the week | Makroökonomisch

Rising margin expectations continue to support equities, underscoring the resilience of corporate profitability in the face of last year’s tariffs and this year’s Middle East war. The U.S. remains especially strong compared to peers, though first quarter earnings will be an important test.

 Time to buy tech?
Chart of the week | Makroökonomisch

Technology valuations have meaningfully declined over the past year, but the sector continues to stand out for its strong earnings growth and relative resilience. While near-term uncertainty remains, tech still appears well positioned as a key driver of broader market growth.

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