European technology giants are exceeding expectations this quarter, joining financial and healthcare companies as one of the reporting season’s best-performing segments.
Buoyed by artificial intelligence (AI) demand, the technology sub-sector in the MSCI Europe index averaged earnings growth of 5.5 per cent in the fourth quarter, significantly ahead of pre-season estimates of 0.5 per cent. The MSCI Europe Index’s 1.1 per cent per-share earnings growth is also ahead of expectations of a 1.3 per cent decline.
Along with healthcare and financial companies, technology is one of three sub-indexes that has surprised most positively so far this season. That’s with companies accounting for more than 70 per cent of the MSCI Europe index’ market value having reported. While pharmaceutical companies and banks have been bright spots for European earnings in the past year, technology is a newcomer.
The sector’s main growth drivers for the fourth quarter were ASML and Nokia, according to Bloomberg Intelligence (BI) strategists Kaidi Meng and Laurent Douillet. The main drag on the industry has come from STMicroelectronics and Infineon Technologies.
While semiconductor companies themselves have struggled, the equipment makers are in better shape. Infineon and STMicroelectronics have “low visibility” and are still looking for the bottom in weak automotive and industrial end-markets, while their AI exposure remains limited compared with ASML, Sara Russo, a Bernstein analyst, said in an interview.
ASML, the biggest company in the sub-index by market value, reported bookings worth twice as much as analysts expected in the quarter. The company is set to benefit from surging demand for chipmaking machines, as companies are spending heavily on AI.
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Meanwhile, Nokia’s mobile networks division, which makes 5G equipment, showed signs of improvement after two years of operators holding back on expensive upgrades. Overall sales were also driven by an increase in the network infrastructure unit, where one “key focus area is the upcoming growth in data centres”, outgoing chief executive officer Pekka Lundmark said on the earnings call.
The second-largest company in the sub-index, software giant SAP, is also embracing the AI boom. SAP raised its revenue outlook for 2025 and reported 29 per cent growth in its cloud backlog, as clients increasingly take up its AI business services offering.
“AI-driven growth has just started to show in the EPS (earnings per share)” for companies such as ASML and SAP, BI’s Meng said, adding that AI demand is still in an early stage. Beyond 2025 and 2026, the outlook for ASML will depend on whether AI adoption by end-users can justify even higher capital spending, BI’s Douillet added.
Looking ahead, estimates for the wider technology sector are trending higher, though a sustained recovery is not guaranteed, Meng and Douillet said. Threats include US tariffs, headwinds for the chip segment from lower electric vehicle demand and industrial manufacturing, and persistent economic weakness in China and Europe.
Tariffs could hurt primarily Infineon and STMicroelectronics, though the impact might trickle down to ASML, according to Bernstein’s Russo.
“If there’s lower demand for chips because of tariffs, semiconductor companies may not buy as much equipment, but it’s a second-order problem as opposed to a direct issue for ASML,” she said. BLOOMBERG