Quarterly Outlook
Q3 Investor Outlook: Beyond American shores – why diversification is your strongest ally
Jacob Falkencrone
Global Head of Investment Strategy
Investment Strategist
AI isn’t only an American story. Europe builds the machines that print the chips, supplies the edge semis for cars and factories, runs the software inside those plants, and writes the data rules. Markets still price the U.S. narrative, yet Europe controls chip-making tools and the software that runs factories. European companies often trade at a discount to U.S. peers, but scarce, high-quality names still command premiums. Policy is also tilting spend toward local, auditable cloud where Europe competes well. And beyond the U.S., China’s tech is closing the gap at home—see: US vs China tech A catch-up that investors cannot ignore | Saxo.
Europe’s AI shows up across a simple stack. First, the machines that print chips. Then the chips that live in cars, factories, and power gear. Add the software that runs those plants. Finally, the rules and clouds that keep data local and auditable. Each pillar has different drivers and risks. Below is a quick tour so you can map exposure fast.
ASML Holding is Europe’s irreplaceable chip toolmaker. It builds extreme ultraviolet (EUV) lithography machines, the only equipment capable of etching the smallest features on advanced AI chips. Without them, Nvidia or TSMC cannot push transistor density higher. Its next step, High-NA EUV, enables even tighter designs—critical as AI workloads demand faster, more efficient chips.
This scarcity makes ASML a bottleneck for global chip supply. Beyond tools, ASML has also backed France’s Mistral AI, signalling Europe’s push to tie hardware strength to sovereign model development. For investors, this is structural scarcity with long runways as nodes shrink and packaging improves; the risks are export curbs, customer capex cycles, and delivery timing.
Europe’s semiconductor play extends well beyond data centers. STMicroelectronics supplies microcontrollers (MCUs) and sensors with on-device AI features, vital for cars, industrial machinery, and power systems where latency and privacy matter. Infineon Technologies complements this with power semiconductors and automotive chips that enable EVs and industrial automation, increasingly embedding AI logic at the edge.
Together, STM and Infineon give Europe leverage in sectors where AI meets the “real economy”—factories, energy, and vehicles. For investors, that means diversified AI exposure tied to unit volumes and content per device; key risks are the auto cycle, pricing pressure in commoditised parts, and inventory swings.
AI copilots help most where data is clean and trusted. SAP’s Joule sits inside finance, procurement, and supply-chain workflows, so answers link to real records and approvals.
Dassault Systèmes brings AI into “digital twins” (virtual models of real machines or plants) to test designs, improve yield, and plan maintenance. For investors, think compounding recurring revenue with consistent cross-sell; risks are slower IT budgets, long enterprise sales cycles, and proof-of-value hurdles.
Two EU rules are shifting budgets. The EU AI Act phases in through 2025, lifting transparency and safety bars. The EU Data Act cuts ‘egress’ friction—the cost to move data out of a cloud—so switching gets easier. Net effect: more demand for local, auditable setups. OVH offers EU-native sovereign cloud with public-sector wins and data-residency guarantees. Deutsche Telekom, via T-Systems, builds and runs sovereign clouds for ministries and regulated industries.
Europe is also building a common rulebook for cloud data-sharing. Gaia-X is an industry-led initiative, backed by EU governments, that sets technical and governance standards so data can move between providers without lock-in while keeping residency and security controls. For investors, spend tilts toward vendors that prove EU data residency and auditability; risks are fragmentation, higher compliance costs, and slower procurement.
Europe often prices cheaper than the U.S., so you can find bargains—but not everywhere. Scarce, category-leading names command premiums, while cyclicals and lesser-known plays still trade at discounts.
Why the gap:
Europe’s AI case is practical: chip tools, edge semis, factory software, and rules that keep data local and auditable. If buyers shift toward sovereign clouds and on-prem AI, that spend can build across this stack. Risks are clear: export controls, slower capex, and the auto-industrial cycle.
Near term, the EU Data Act rollout and AI Act guidance will shape pricing and vendor offers, while enterprise AI adoption show how fast demand is moving. Europe’s AI is about control and compliance—useful over flashy—and that can compound over time.