Outrageous Predictions
Switzerland's Green Revolution: CHF 30 Billion Initiative by 2050
Katrin Wagner
Head of Investment Content Switzerland
Europe’s heatwave is lifting cooling demand and testing power grids.
Winners may include equipment makers, grid suppliers and selected utilities.
The risks sit in power prices, insurance claims and household spending pressure.
In late June 2026, Western Europe faced record heat, with France, Spain, Italy and the United Kingdom among the countries under pressure. Schools closed, transport slowed, power systems strained, and consumers rushed to buy fans and air conditioners. That is uncomfortable at street level. In markets, it creates a simple chain: heat raises cooling demand, cooling raises electricity use, electricity demand stresses grids, and grid stress changes earnings expectations. For investors, the point is not to trade the thermometer. That is a very small desk with a very hot chair. The point is to understand how extreme weather can move from the forecast page into revenues, costs, margins and insurance losses.
The most obvious heatwave trade starts with cooling.
Daikin, Samsung Electronics and LG Electronics are clear examples. Daikin is a Japanese heating, ventilation and air conditioning specialist. Samsung and LG are South Korean electronics groups with large consumer appliance businesses. When European households discover that a south-facing flat can become a small oven, demand for cooling products rises quickly.
That does not mean every summer heatwave becomes a durable profit boom. Portable air conditioners are often lower-margin products. Supply chains can be stretched. Retail demand can fade if the weather breaks. But the direction of travel is hard to ignore. Europe has historically had low air-conditioning ownership compared with many warmer regions. If hot summers become more frequent, cooling may move from a luxury purchase to a basic comfort product.
This also helps explain the building angle. Legrand makes electrical and digital building infrastructure. Assa Abloy makes locks, doors and access systems. Kingspan makes insulation and building materials. These companies are not pure heatwave plays. They are linked to the deeper question: how do buildings become more liveable, efficient and resilient?
A good building does not only need a bigger air conditioner. It needs better insulation, smarter wiring, efficient controls, shading, doors, ventilation and power management. Otherwise, Europe risks solving the heat problem by creating a power bill problem. Very elegant, in the way a leaking roof is solved by buying more buckets.
The second part of the story is electricity.
Schneider Electric and Siemens Energy sit close to this pressure point. Schneider Electric sells power management, automation and energy efficiency equipment. Siemens Energy supplies grid technology, turbines and energy infrastructure. When electricity systems face higher peaks, more renewables, more electrification and more cooling demand, the value of grid investment becomes easier to explain.
Utilities are more mixed.
E.ON and National Grid are mainly network businesses. They earn much of their money by owning and operating regulated electricity and gas infrastructure. Heatwaves can raise investment needs because grids must handle higher peak demand, local stress and more complex power flows. For regulated utilities, the long-term opportunity is that investment in resilient grids may support future asset growth. The boring wires suddenly get a speaking role.
RWE, Enel and Iberdrola have more generation exposure. They own power plants and renewable assets. High electricity prices can support revenues for some generators, especially when supply is tight. But heat can also hurt. Nuclear plants may reduce output when river water becomes too warm for cooling. Low wind can reduce renewable production. Drought can hit hydropower. Gas-fired power can become the marginal source, meaning it sets the price when demand is high and cheaper supply is not enough.
So heatwaves do not simply mean “utilities win”. The details matter. Network operators may benefit from the investment cycle. Generators may gain from higher prices in some hours but face operational risks in others. Retail utilities may struggle if customers face high bills and political pressure rises. The weather may be hot, but the analysis still needs to stay cool.
The third layer is insurance.
Munich Re and Swiss Re are reinsurers. Reinsurers insure insurers, which sounds like financial plumbing because it is. They help spread large risks across the system, including storms, wildfires, floods and other weather-related events.
Heatwaves can affect insurers in several ways. They can raise health, agriculture and business interruption risks. They can increase wildfire risk when dry conditions and high temperatures meet. They can also expose infrastructure weakness, from power outages to transport disruption. For reinsurers, that can mean higher claims in some years, but also stronger pricing over time if risks become more visible and insurance buyers accept higher premiums.
This is the strange insurance logic. Bad weather can hurt near-term claims but support better pricing later. The umbrella business dislikes storms, but storms remind everyone why umbrellas cost money.
The first risk is that investors overreact to one hot summer. A short burst of air-conditioner demand does not automatically create a decade of profit growth. Watch for order backlogs, inventory levels and whether demand remains strong after temperatures normalise.
The second risk is political. High electricity prices can trigger government intervention, windfall taxes or pressure on utilities to protect households. That can change the earnings story quickly.
The third risk is cost. Grid upgrades, cooling equipment, insulation and insurance all require spending. Companies with strong balance sheets and pricing power are better placed, but customers may push back if household budgets are already stretched.
Track power prices and grid warnings, not only temperature headlines.
Separate equipment demand from lasting infrastructure investment.
Watch whether utilities earn returns on new grid spending.
Treat heatwave exposure as a portfolio theme, not a single-stock shortcut.
Europe’s heatwave is a reminder that weather can become an earnings story faster than many investors expect. The first-order effect is simple: people buy cooling and use more electricity. The second-order effect is more important: grids need investment, buildings need upgrading, insurers need better pricing and households need help managing higher bills.
That makes this a useful portfolio lesson, not a climate lecture. The heatwave trade is not about guessing next week’s temperature. It is about spotting where resilience becomes revenue, where stress becomes cost, and where the old European assumption of mild summers no longer looks like a safe forecast. In markets, as in July flats, ignoring heat rarely makes it go away.
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