The European earnings season confronts a formidable challenge: the cascading impact of dollar weakness. Since January 2025, the euro has surged nearly 13% against the greenback, with sterling climbing close to 8%. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index languishes near three-year lows, down 9% from its January peak. This currency turbulence threatens significant repercussions for major European firms drawing over a quarter of their revenue from North America. Companies lacking robust hedging strategies against volatility fueled by unpredictable U.S. trade policies face heightened vulnerability.
Analysis from Citigroup reveals a stark correlation: every 10% jump in the euro-dollar spot rate potentially erodes European corporate profits by approximately 2%. This exposure contrasts sharply with indices in the U.S., Canada, China, and broader emerging markets, where 72% to 85% of business remains domestically anchored. Europe's Stoxx 600, by comparison, derives only 40% of its revenue from home markets.
"The dollar's steep decline this year stems directly from Trump's fiscal and trade agenda," noted Susana Cruz, strategist at Panmure Liberum. "The pain extends to U.S. manufacturers reliant on imported materials, American exporters—especially finished goods facing tariffs—and foreign investors holding dollar-denominated assets."
Sectors like healthcare, consumer services and goods, luxury, and software appear most exposed. Financial services, real estate, and insurance exhibit greater insulation, their revenues less swayed by dollar fluctuations. Exporters in sensitive industries, including German chemical distributor Brenntag SE, already feel the strain. Brenntag recently downgraded its full-year outlook, citing adverse euro-dollar moves since Q2; North America contributes 32% of its revenue.
Analysts are broadly scaling back expectations, now forecasting declining profits for European companies. While this lowers the bar for earnings surprises, persistent negative trends could trigger further downward revisions. Although euro strength traditionally buoyed European equities, this correlation has weakened recently—a sign investors recognize tightening profit conditions despite improving economic signals.
Andreas Bruck and his U.S. Bank team warn that recent euro appreciation could push this quarter's EPS beat rate down to 50%, below the 53% long-term average. Sell-side analysts project a 3% year-on-year EPS drop for the Stoxx 600, the steepest decline in five quarters, driven by sluggish demand and a 3.5% YoY rise in the euro's trade-weighted index—a five-quarter high.
Despite recent dollar stabilization, major institutions anticipate continued weakness. Goldman Sachs' Peter Oppenheimer team forecasts a prolonged dollar depreciation, sustaining headwinds for European earnings. Goldman's basket of European stocks with high dollar revenue exposure has underperformed the Stoxx Europe 600 by roughly 9 percentage points this year, featuring names like Deutsche Telekom, Roche Holding, BP, BAT, and EssilorLuxottica.
Corporate vulnerability hinges critically on hedging sophistication. Luxury stocks, while broadly exposed to dollar risk, show uneven profit impact. Brunello Cucinelli SpA's recent earnings beat, met with market enthusiasm, showcased double-digit growth across regions unaffected by currency swings. The chairman emphasized pre-emptive exchange rate expectations set before product launches during the earnings call.
"The advantage lies with firms possessing advanced hedging programs," highlighted Marina Zavolock's Morgan Stanley team. Their research indicates 38% of MSCI Europe constituents deploy such strategies, with software, aerospace, autos, and luxury sectors demonstrating the most sophisticated FX hedging frameworks.
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