Stock Markets February 2, 2026

UBS Sees Eurozone Outperforming UK Equities in 2026 Amid Stretched UK Valuations

After a concentrated 2025 rally led by a handful of sectors, UBS says UK equity returns next year will hinge on earnings and global growth

By Marcus Reed
UBS Sees Eurozone Outperforming UK Equities in 2026 Amid Stretched UK Valuations

UBS expects UK equities to lag their Eurozone counterparts in 2026. The brokerage points to a narrow base of 2025 gains, elevated valuations and a UK economy that faced subdued growth and persistent inflation last year. By contrast, UBS highlights marginally stronger growth expectations, more attractive valuations and manufacturing exposure in the Eurozone as reasons for its preference.

Key Points

  • UBS expects UK equities to underperform Eurozone stocks in 2026, citing stretched valuations and a concentrated 2025 rally.
  • Four main drivers powered the UK’s 22% FTSE 100 gain in 2025: banks, pharmaceuticals, defence-related companies, and mining stocks supported by higher precious and base metal prices.
  • Eurozone is favoured for 2026 due to marginally stronger growth expectations, more attractive valuations, stabilising manufacturing activity and increased fiscal support, notably from Germany.

UBS projects that UK shares will underperform Eurozone equities in 2026, despite the FTSE 100 delivering a strong 22% gain in 2025. The firm attributes its outlook to valuation levels that it views as extended, and to the concentrated nature of last year’s rally, according to a note published on Monday.

The gain in the FTSE 100 during 2025 outpaced both the Eurozone and U.S. markets, but UBS strategist Anthi Tsouvali noted the advance was driven by a limited group of companies and four clear sectoral drivers.

Banks were the primary engine of the rally - supported by resilient earnings and a pronounced rerating that lifted sector valuations. Pharmaceuticals posted a recovery as uncertainty over U.S. healthcare policy abated, while defence-related firms benefited from rising European defence spending priorities. Mining stocks also contributed materially to returns, bolstered by higher prices for gold, silver and copper.

UBS warned that broader UK macro conditions remained a drag through 2025. The bank highlighted subdued economic growth and inflation that stayed elevated for much of the year. In response, the Bank of England cut interest rates on a quarterly basis, though UBS characterises the overall stance of monetary policy as still restrictive.

Given those dynamics, UBS said a significant portion of the positive market momentum now appears priced into UK equities, with valuations sitting above historical averages. The firm believes that future total returns for UK stocks will be heavily dependent on earnings growth - and that earnings improvement is conditional on a rebound in global economic conditions.

For 2026, UBS prefers Eurozone equities to UK stocks. The brokerage cited marginally stronger growth expectations and comparatively more attractive valuations across the Euro area. It also pointed to a structural backdrop that it views as supportive - including increased fiscal commitments from Germany and NATO - combined with the prospect of a cyclical recovery.

After a prolonged manufacturing downturn, activity in the Eurozone has stabilised, UBS said, which in its view helps set the stage for renewed growth. The region’s substantial exposure to global manufacturing is presented as a positive for an improving cycle, with valuations still reasonable relative to historical norms.

UBS identified Germany as a market likely to benefit from higher fiscal spending, and it pointed to opportunities across multiple sectors there, including banks, information technology, industrials, utilities and real estate. The brokerage also highlighted two thematic ideas for investors: "European Leaders," meaning companies positioned to gain from structural changes within Europe, and Swiss high-quality dividend stocks, which it describes as offering steady returns and defensive traits.


Note: The projections and sector observations above reflect UBS’s published analysis and the factors it identified as driving recent market outcomes and prospective performance.

Risks

  • UK returns rely heavily on earnings growth, which UBS says is contingent on an improvement in global economic conditions - if the global cycle fails to recover, earnings may disappoint, affecting sectors reliant on corporate profitability such as banks and resources.
  • Valuations in UK equities exceed historical averages, leaving limited margin for error if macro or company-level results are weaker than expected, which could pressure sectors that led the rally, including banks and mining.
  • Eurozone hopes hinge on a cyclical recovery and fiscal support translating into tangible demand; if manufacturing activity does not sustain the stabilisation UBS notes, sectors tied to industrial output and technology may underperform.

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