10stratsL

Quality strikes back: inside Europe’s rotation

Ruben Dalfovo
Ruben Dalfovo

Investment Strategist

Key takeaways

  • Leadership is broadening across Europe, rewarding cash generation and solid execution over style tags.
  • LVMH, ASML, and Nestlé showed that clean inventories, delivery cadence, and cost discipline can still drive re-ratings.
  • Key risks: China demand, AI capex timing, policy and rates, and crowded GRANOLAS positioning.

Europe’s leadership is rotating

A rotation in market leadership is underway. Sectors that lagged into August have bounced hard from their summer lows. Basic Resources, Technology, Healthcare and Luxury Goods have gained roughly 26%, 13%, 12% and 20% since then.

Momentum has underperformed as leadership broadened. Quality has retaken the wheel, led by the ‘GRANOLAS’ group of European heavyweights. A pause in EUR strength and easier bond yields removed headwinds for globally exposed franchises.

The result is a cleaner market that rewards delivery and strong fundamentals, not labels. Investors have shifted from stories to results. The winners pair clean inventories, firmer orders and tight execution. Call it the delivery trade. In short, execution and cash flow outweigh labels and tales.

Meet the GRANOLAS

GRANOLAS is Goldman Sachs’s nickname for eleven European leaders: GSK, Roche, ASML, Nestlé, Novartis, Novo Nordisk, L’Oréal, LVMH, AstraZeneca, SAP and Sanofi. They share classic quality traits such as resilient margins, high returns on capital, and global sales. They also matter for index leadership because of their size and liquidity. Healthcare within the group is nuanced, with obesity and oncology strength offset by pricing pressure and patent cycles.

The last twelve months were tough. A weaker dollar hurt exporters when revenues were translated back. A steeper yield curve and improving 2026 growth hopes pulled investors toward financials, industrials, defence and other cyclicals. Stock specifics added friction. Luxury faced choppy China demand and stricter inventory discipline. Semiconductors dealt with export rules and delivery timing worries. Healthcare saw pricing headlines and trial noise. Staples managed input cost swings and portfolio clean-ups. Put together, quality fell out of favour and the GRANOLAS lagged.

Bottom-up drivers set the tone

Macro set the backdrop, not the outcome. Currency and yield shifts nudge relative winners and losers, but this rotation did not hinge on one macro lever. The euro wobbled in October but did not run, giving exporters and tourism a lift rather than a rocket. Bond yields eased from recent peaks, which helps longer-duration stories like luxury and high-quality tech. Yet the biggest moves landed on results days, not during rate chatter.

Valuation looks reasonable. On about 19x average forward price-to-earnings vs the STOXX 50 at 17x, the group trades at a modest premium to the market for businesses with pricing power and high returns.

granolas_infographic_final
Methodology: market capitalisation and 12-month forward P/E from Bloomberg; all values converted to EUR using ECB reference FX rates as of 17 October 2025. YTD % performance figures taken from each company’s primary European listing, rounded to the nearest whole percent. Source: Saxo Bank calculations and estimates.

Quality at work: three case studies

Three prints did the heavy lifting. LVMH jumped 12% on 15 October as growth returned in the third quarter. ASML rose 3% after stronger-than-expected bookings tied to artificial intelligence capacity. Nestlé rallied 9.3% on 16 October as investors cheered a reset under incoming leadership. The market read these as proof points that quality with global revenues still compounds when execution shows up.

earnings_day_reactions

These three are bellwethers. LVMH sets the tone for luxury demand and pricing power. ASML is the capacity gatekeeper for semiconductors. Nestlé anchors staples with scale and resilient cash flows. Their beats and guidance shape sector sentiment fast, so the rotation’s credibility rests on their delivery.

One week that moved the narrative

Leadership concentration is risky when it rests on narrow momentum. This rotation looks broader. The winners span luxury, chips and staples, and the drivers are business-specific rather than a single macro factor. That lowers the chance that one data point breaks the whole trade. For portfolios, the lesson is clear. The market is paying for delivery, cash-flow durability and global pricing power.

Earnings beat scepticism. LVMH’s update ended a two-quarter lull and lifted the whole luxury complex. Expectations were muted after a soft first half and stop-start China demand. The bar was low: stabilisation, clean inventory, and fewer promotions. The update delivered exactly that, with growth back in the third quarter and firmer full-price sell-through. Read-across: luxury pricing power still works when the product mix is right. That lifted peers and improved confidence in holiday sell-through.

AI capex ripples through the stack. ASML’s orders surprised on the upside, signalling that both foundries and memory makers are locking in tools to serve data-centre demand. Management framed demand as multi-year, with tool shipments and grid hookups now the real bottlenecks. Read-across: the capital-expenditure flywheel is intact. When ASML’s order book improves, suppliers and chipmakers usually follow. Supply chains read this as a capacity green light into 2026.

Staples reset and refocus. Nestlé’s 9.3% single-day gain flagged that cost discipline and portfolio optimisation can still unlock value in a slower-growth world. The market wanted a cleaner plan and tighter cost control from incoming leadership. It got a reset: sharper focus, faster decisions, and clearer priorities. Read-across: staples with scale and discipline can still re-rate without a growth boom.

subsectors_performance

Risks and early warning signs

China demand. A setback in travel or local consumption would dent luxury and staples. Track monthly mainland sales signals from listed peers and management commentary.

AI capex timing. Any push-out of data-centre projects, grid connections or memory expansions would filter quickly to tool orders. Follow order phasing and capex updates from top customers.

Policy and rates noise. Trade headlines can shift factor leadership in days. A stronger dollar or a jump in long yields would challenge globally exposed quality stocks.

GRANOLAS crowding. Positioning is heavy. A rates back-up, EUR strength, or small earnings misses could force de-crowding. Watch valuation spreads, factor flows, futures and ETF positioning, and guidance revisions.

Investor playbook

  • Use LVMH, ASML and Nestlé as bellwethers: LVMH for luxury demand, ASML for the chip cycle, Nestlé for staples resilience.
  • Follow delivery, not labels. Prioritise companies showing beat-and-raise patterns and clean sell-through.
  • Use earnings-day reactions as signals. Outsized day-one moves often precede multi-week leadership.
  • Watch cadence, not just backlog. Delivery slots at ASML; full-price sell-through at LVMH; portfolio and margin actions at Nestlé.
  • Expect dispersion. This earnings season will separate steady compounders from the rest.
  • Keep an eye on the usual spoilers: China consumer cadence, power and grid delays for data centres, and interest rates movements.

The loop closes

Europe’s baton is moving from narrow momentum to broad, repeatable delivery. LVMH showed full-price demand still pays. ASML confirmed the AI capex engine is alive. Nestlé proved scale plus discipline can re-rate. That mix matters more than a soft euro or a kinder yield curve.

What keeps this into November is simple. Clean holiday sell-through at top luxury houses. Order cadence and on-time tool shipments across the chip stack. Portfolio focus and margin progress at the staples leaders. Healthcare remains nuanced, with obesity and oncology winners offset by pricing and patent cycles.

For investors, the homework is clear. Track delivery cadence, not slogans. Watch guidance tone more than macro headlines. Use earnings-day reactions as live signals of who is leading now. The loop closes where it started: in a noisy backdrop, real results beat narratives.

This material is marketing content and should not be regarded as investment advice. Trading financial instruments carries risks and historic performance is not a guarantee of future results.

The instrument(s) referenced in this content may be issued by a partner, from whom Saxo receives promotional fees, payment or retrocessions. While Saxo may receive compensation from these partnerships, all content is created with the aim of providing clients with valuable information and options.

Les informations contenues sur ce site web vous sont fournies par Saxo Bank (Suisse) SA («Saxo Bank») à des fins éducatives et informatives uniquement. Ces informations ne doivent pas être considérées comme une offre ou une recommandation d'effectuer une transaction ou de recourir à un service particulier, et leur contenu ne doit pas être interprété comme un conseil de toute autre nature, par exemple de nature fiscale ou juridique.

Les transactions sur titres comportent des risques. Les pertes peuvent dépasser les dépôts sur les produits de marge. Vous devez comprendre le fonctionnement de nos produits et les risques qui y sont associés. En outre, vous devriez évaluer si vous pouvez vous permettre de prendre un risque élevé de perdre votre argent.

Saxo Bank ne garantit pas l'exactitude, l'exhaustivité ou l'utilité des informations fournies et n'est pas responsable des erreurs, omissions, pertes ou dommages résultant de l'utilisation de ces informations.

Le contenu de ce site web représente du matériel de marketing et n'est pas le résultat d'une analyse ou d'une recherche financière. Il n'a donc pas été préparé conformément aux directives visant à promouvoir l'indépendance de la recherche financière/en investissement et n'est soumis à aucune interdiction de négociation avant la diffusion de la recherche financière/en investissement.

Saxo Bank (Suisse) SA
The Circle 38
CH-8058
Zürich-Flughafen
Suisse

Nous contacter

Select region

Suisse
Suisse

Le trading d’instruments financiers comporte des risques. Les pertes peuvent dépasser les dépôts sur les produits de marge. Vous devez comprendre comment fonctionnent nos produits et quels types de risques ils comportent. De plus, vous devez savoir si vous pouvez vous permettre de prendre un risque élevé de perdre votre argent. Pour vous aider à comprendre les risques impliqués, nous avons compilé une divulgation des risques ainsi qu'un ensemble de documents d'informations clés (Key Information Documents ou KID) qui décrivent les risques et opportunités associés à chaque produit. Les KID sont accessibles sur la plateforme de trading. Veuillez noter que le prospectus complet est disponible gratuitement auprès de Saxo Bank (Suisse) SA ou directement auprès de l'émetteur.

Ce site web est accessible dans le monde entier. Cependant, les informations sur le site web se réfèrent à Saxo Bank (Suisse) SA. Tous les clients traitent directement avec Saxo Bank (Suisse) SA. et tous les accords clients sont conclus avec Saxo Bank (Suisse) SA et sont donc soumis au droit suisse.

Le contenu de ce site web constitue du matériel de marketing et n'a été signalé ou transmis à aucune autorité réglementaire.

Si vous contactez Saxo Bank (Suisse) SA ou visitez ce site web, vous reconnaissez et acceptez que toutes les données que vous transmettez, recueillez ou enregistrez via ce site web, par téléphone ou par tout autre moyen de communication (par ex. e-mail), à Saxo Bank (Suisse) SA peuvent être transmises à d'autres sociétés ou tiers du groupe Saxo Bank en Suisse et à l'étranger et peuvent être enregistrées ou autrement traitées par eux ou Saxo Bank (Suisse) SA. Vous libérez Saxo Bank (Suisse) SA de ses obligations au titre du secret bancaire suisse et du secret des négociants en valeurs mobilières et, dans la mesure permise par la loi, des autres lois et obligations concernant la confidentialité dans le cadre des divulgations de données du client. Saxo Bank (Suisse) SA a pris des mesures techniques et organisationnelles de pointe pour protéger lesdites données contre tout traitement ou transmission non autorisés et appliquera des mesures de sécurité appropriées pour garantir une protection adéquate desdites données.

Apple, iPad et iPhone sont des marques déposées d'Apple Inc., enregistrées aux États-Unis et dans d'autres pays. App Store est une marque de service d'Apple Inc.