Lead
European equity strategists told Bloomberg on Mar 23, 2026 that they remain broadly sanguine about the region's medium-term outlook, with a plurality anticipating a return to record highs within 12 months. The survey — conducted the week after the first significant escalation in the Iran conflict — captured a defensive posture on rates and oil but an enduring constructive stance on multiples and cyclical recovery. The backdrop of higher commodity prices and a near-term spike in inflation expectations has not, in the view of respondents, undermined the structural case for European earnings growth through 2026. Short-term volatility has been sizeable: Bloomberg reported a roughly 3–4% drawdown in major European indices over the seven days through Mar 23, 2026, but strategists cited resilient corporate cashflows, stronger balance sheets and continuing services-led consumption as offsets.
That divergence between near-term risk pricing and medium-term optimism frames the core question for institutional investors: are policymakers and market microstructure features sufficient to cap downside before fundamentals reassert? This piece analyses the data behind the survey, compares the current configuration to prior geopolitical shocks, reviews sector implications, assesses risks, and offers a Fazen Capital Perspective on where tactical risk premia may emerge. All data points and quotations referencing the survey use Bloomberg (Mar 23, 2026) unless otherwise noted.
Context
The Bloomberg survey (Mar 23, 2026) queried approximately 40 institutional strategists and chief market strategists across global banks and independent boutiques; a majority indicated expectations that European benchmark indices — including the STOXX Europe 600 and Euro Stoxx 50 — would retest or exceed prior record levels within 12 months. That view sits against a macro backdrop where Eurozone headline CPI ran at 2.6% year-over-year in February 2026 per Eurostat, up from 1.9% YoY a year earlier, and where Brent crude futures rose roughly 15% from early March to mid-March 2026 (ICE, Mar 2026). Strategists cited those inflation dynamics as both a near-term headwind for real returns and a potential catalyst for energy and commodity-related earnings upgrades.
Comparative history is instructive. During the 2014–15 Russia-Ukraine episodes, European equities experienced pronounced cross-sectional weakness concentrated in financials and energy; recovery to prior highs took 6–12 months depending on index and local policy action. By contrast, the strategists in the current Bloomberg sample emphasize the difference in corporate balance-sheet quality: European non-financial corporates entered 2026 with leverage ratios materially lower than the post-2012 period and with liquidity buffers that have averaged about 18–22% of market cap for large-cap constituents (internal Fazen analysis, 2026). That structural improvement shapes the forecast for a quicker reversion to trend if supply-side shocks abate.
Monetary policy is another critical variable. The European Central Bank maintained its policy stance through March 2026 with rates at 3.25% (ECB press release, Mar 5, 2026) and signalled a data-dependent approach. Strategists in the Bloomberg survey generally expect one to two modest hikes in the next 12 months if inflationary pressures persist, but many also argue that the ECB will prioritize growth stability over aggressive tightening. That dynamic — slowfed hikes versus aggressive front-loading — is central to the argument that equities can absorb short-term risk premia without derailing long-term valuation expansion.
Data Deep Dive
Three data points from public sources help quantify the current market positioning. First, the Bloomberg strategist survey (Mar 23, 2026) indicated that roughly 60% of respondents expected European indices to revisit record highs within 12 months. Second, Eurostat reported a 2.6% YoY headline CPI for the Eurozone in February 2026, up from 1.9% YoY in February 2025 — a 0.7 percentage-point acceleration (Eurostat, Feb 2026 release). Third, Brent crude futures rose approximately 15% between Mar 7 and Mar 18, 2026 following escalation in the Middle East (ICE data, Mar 2026). These three datapoints capture the nexus of sentiment, macro pressure and commodity-driven supply risk.
Positioning metrics reinforce the survey's tenor. Institutional cash balances at European asset managers climbed to approximately 4.5% of AUM by mid-March 2026 from 3.2% at the start of the year (industry reports aggregated by Fazen Capital), indicating tactical de-risking but not wholesale liquidation. Sector rotation patterns show underweight exposures to cyclicals relative to financials in the weeks following the conflict, with relative flows favouring defensive sectors such as consumer staples and healthcare — yet the net exposure remains overweight equities versus cash for many allocators surveyed by Fazen Capital in Europe (Mar 2026 investor checks).
Valuations are another pillar of the debate. On a 12-month forward basis, the STOXX Europe 600 was trading near 13.8x earnings in mid-March 2026, modestly below its 10-year average of about 14.6x (Refinitiv, Mar 2026). Earnings forecasts for 2026 have been trimmed slightly — consensus EPS revisions show a -1.8% change in the prior month — but the revisions are sector-concentrated with energy and materials seeing upward revisions while technology and discretionary estimates were cut. The cross-sectional nature of those revisions explains part of strategists' confidence: the earnings recovery need not be uniform to push headline indices back toward record peaks.
Sector Implications
Energy and materials are immediate beneficiaries of higher commodity prices, with consensus EBITDA revisions for European energy companies up approximately 8–10% year-to-date through mid-March 2026 (consensus IBES/research house aggregation). That is a contrast to financials, where shorter-term pressure on net interest margins and credit volatility weighs. Banks with significant trading and capital markets activity face valuation compression in the near term — European banks traded at roughly 0.6x tangible book in mid-March 2026 versus 0.75x at the start of 2025 (market data provider estimates), reflecting increased risk premia.
Defensive sectors exhibit classic safe-haven flows. Consumer staples and healthcare saw relative inflows in the two weeks after the conflict escalated, while cyclically exposed industrials and autos underperformed the index. However, the strategists' optimism is predicated on the scenario where the geopolitical shock is short-lived or contained; in that scenario, cyclicals and financials would likely lead the subsequent leg higher as risk appetite normalizes. This cross-sector asymmetry underscores why broader index-level exposure may underperform targeted, cyclical overweight strategies during a robust recovery.
Technology and growth names face a valuation sensitivity to rising rates; large-cap European tech was approximately flat year-to-date through mid-March 2026 but had seen relative underperformance versus US megacaps, which were up mid-single digits YTD. This divergence is partly structural — US tech enjoys a more robust domestic demand cycle and deeper capital markets support — and partly cyclical, with investors preferring domestic growth exposure in risk-off windows. The consequence for European-focused allocators is a need to balance domestic cyclicals against international growth exposures.
Risk Assessment
The dominant risk is a prolonged geopolitical escalation that disrupts energy flows or prompts sustained risk aversion. A scenario where Brent remains above $100/bbl for multiple quarters would materially increase inflation trajectory and force more aggressive central bank responses, which would depress multiples. Secondary risks include second-order supply-chain interruptions (particularly in autos and industrials), a sharper-than-expected slowdown in Chinese demand, and idiosyncratic sovereign stress in peripheral markets.
Market-structure risks also matter: liquidity in European small- and mid-cap stocks is thin relative to the US, and a rapid repricing event could exacerbate realised volatility. Options market skews and term premiums widened in the days following the escalation, with 3-month EUR put-call skew moving 12–15% wider than the 2025 average (options exchange data, Mar 2026). That suggests hedging costs remain elevated and could dampen tactical buying by leveraged funds.
Policy risk is non-trivial. If the ECB pivots to a more restrictive path than current projections imply, or if fiscal responses across large European economies prove insufficient to offset a growth slowdown, the path back to records could lengthen. Conversely, a coordinated fiscal package or a diplomatic de-escalation could materially shorten recovery timelines. Strategists’ baseline — retesting record highs within 12 months — assumes neither tail is realized.
Fazen Capital Perspective
Fazen Capital views the Bloomberg survey’s optimism as conditional and tactical rather than unequivocal. The data points cited by strategists are directionally correct: corporate balance-sheet improvements since the pandemic, relatively moderate forward valuations (STOXX Europe 600 ~13.8x forward EPS mid-March 2026), and elevated cash buffers among institutional investors all support a plausible path back to record highs. However, we flag two contrarian nuances. First, dislocations will likely be sector-specific — the path of least resistance back to records will run through cyclical earnings upgrades (industrial, materials, energy) rather than a uniform multiple expansion across the board. Second, the market’s implied volatility is pricing a higher floor for hedging costs; opportunities for picking up volatility premia via disciplined, delta-hedged strategies could offer superior risk-adjusted returns to outright long index exposure in the near term.
Our tactical view is to favour asymmetric exposure: selectively overweight earnings-revision beneficiaries with robust free cash flow conversion while maintaining neutral index duration. We also see merit in being long volatility through structured trades that cap downside but retain upside participation. Investors should monitor the three key indicators that will determine the speed of recovery: 1) the trajectory of Brent crude (sustained above $95–100 signals material stress), 2) the ECB’s forward guidance and realized inflation prints over the next three months, and 3) corporate earnings revisions across cyclical sectors.
Outlook
If the geopolitical episode stabilizes in weeks rather than months, the combination of moderate valuations, resilient corporate fundamentals and ample liquidity could propel European equities back to record levels within 6–12 months — consistent with the median Bloomberg survey response. In a more protracted conflict scenario, elevated inflation and a steeper policy response would extend recovery timelines and compress multiples. The balance of probabilities, as judged by market participants polled by Bloomberg and by position metrics observed by Fazen Capital, currently favours a rebound rather than a protracted slump.
Institutional investors should prepare for directional dispersion: winners and losers will be defined by sector exposure and balance-sheet strength rather than market-cap alone. Governance-sensitive screening and stress-tested scenarios that incorporate commodity shocks and central-bank reactions can materially change portfolio convexity. For fiduciaries, the operative question is not whether Europe can get back to record highs — the surveyed strategists say it can — but whether the allocation framework anticipates the cross-sectional and timing risks embedded in that return path.
Bottom Line
Bloomberg’s Mar 23, 2026 strategist survey finds a majority expecting European equities to retest record highs within a year, but that outcome is conditional on a short-lived geopolitical shock, contained inflation, and moderate central-bank responses. Tactical, sector-aware positioning and disciplined volatility management will determine whether institutional investors capture the upside while protecting against asymmetric downside.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.
