Despite the turbulent macroeconomic and geopolitical events in recent months, international equity markets performed very strongly during the first half of 2026.
The outbreak of war in Iran, the resulting sharp energy shock and rising inflation, an interest rate hike by the European Central Bank, together with a leadership change at the US Federal Reserve, did not seem to matter much for equity investors.
In the US, the S&P 500 index rose 9.6% in the first half of the year, with the second quarter rise alone (+14.9%) ranking as the strongest in several years.
The other popular indices used to measure the performance of the US stock market also participated in the bull market, with the technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite rising 12.8% and the Dow Jones Industrial Average up by 8.9% as it recorded its best first half in five years.
The Asian markets registered spectacular gains, with South Korea’s Kospi index ranking as the best-performing major index in the world after doubling over the past six months as its two index heavyweights, Samsung Electronics and SK Hynix, each surpassed a market capitalisation of USD1 trillion on the back of surging demand for high-bandwidth memory.
Taiwan’s Taiex index climbed 60%, powered by Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Company, while Japan’s Nikkei 225 index rose by 39.2%.
Meanwhile, the Euro Stoxx 600 index advanced by a more modest 8.4%, with some stronger gains in southern Europe as Italy’s FTSE MIB gained 15%, Spain’s IBEX 35 climbing by 12.5% and the Greek market up by 16%.
Chip stocks vs the Magnificent 7
Many people associate the US stock market to the so-called ‘Magnificent 7’ stocks, comprising Nvidia, Apple, Alphabet, Microsoft, Amazon, Meta Platforms and Tesla.
These collectively currently account for over 30% of the S&P 500 index, indicating a high-level of concentration risk for those investors who simply buy passive index funds or trackers.
While these seven companies generated very strong returns over recent years and were the major contributors of the current bull market that started in late 2022, their performance in the first half of 2026 was very much subdued.
Nvidia, which remains the most valuable company and largest component of the S&P 500 index, gained only 7.3% over the past six months, while Microsoft’s share price dropped by 22.9% and Meta shed 14.7%.
The 10 best performers of the S&P 500 index during the first half of 2026 rose by an average of circa 265%, and eight of these are companies in the microchip sector.
The standout was SanDisk Corporation, whose shares surged by almost 860% due to the global memory shortage and the insatiable demand for storage.
Essentially, after several years during which investors were amply rewarded for simply owning the index via a tracker fund, the developments over the past six months indicate that stock selection or exposure to specific sectors generate the most handsome returns for investors.
European technology names surge
Similar to the evident trend in the US, the best performing equities in Europe were also linked to the semiconductor sector or the wider technology industry.
The standout performers were the Austrian circuit-board maker AT&S (up more than 555%) and the French semiconductor specialist Soitec (up almost 406%).
Other notable performers were Aixtron, STMicroelectronics and Infineon, with gains of 205%, 187% and 117% respectively.
The Dutch lithography giant ASML remains Europe’s largest capitalised company after its share price surged by 86.8% in the first half of 2026.
ASML is the world’s sole manufacturer of the advanced extreme ultraviolet (EUV) machines required by TSMC, Intel and Samsung to print the microchips powering AI data centres.
It is evident that a number of European companies also have important roles in the global chip supply chain and have therefore been prime beneficiaries of the so-called AI trade, albeit these are not mentioned regularly across the international media.
Earnings momentum and the bubble debate
The performance of global equity markets in the first half of 2026 offers another timely reminder that movements across indices and individual share prices are mainly driven by company fundamentals and earnings momentum rather than geopolitical uncertainty or ‘black swan’ events.
However, the extent of the gains across the chip sector have increasingly led to a number of commentators warning of an “earnings bubble”.
During the second half of the year, the central theme is whether the earnings momentum that powered the first six months can be maintained.
The current bull market is essentially one that is being fuelled by the surge in company profits or earnings rather than one that is driven by expanding valuation multiples.
A number of analysts are now forecasting profit growth of roughly 25% for S&P 500 companies over the coming year. Since these profit estimates rose faster than the upturn in the index, the forward price-to-earnings multiple of the S&P 500 actually eased over the period and is also below the levels reached last year.
The strong increase in AI capital expenditure by the hyperscalers is set to exceed USD700 billion this year, which is continuing to widen the beneficiaries of the AI trade to some companies in the power sector, infrastructure and industrials.
The main concern is that the assumption around AI-related earnings and capital-spending may be approaching levels that are difficult to sustain.
Other commentators who are more bullish view the rotation out of many of the Magnificent 7 components into the AI enablers as a healthy development rather than a warning.
There were several instances in recent years when the main concern was the dependence and the degree of concentration by the Magnificent 7 among the S&P 500 index.
Some analysts have said this is the first time since 2022 that the S&P 500 index is close to its record highs despite the weak performance by most of the constituents of the Magnificent 7.
The preoccupation of the degree of earnings momentum that is already priced in to current sentiment was clearly visible this week when Samsung Electronics published its quarterly results.
Although the company said that the operating profit for the second quarter of its financial year is expected to jump by more than 1,800% on a year-on-year basis (and more than its combined profit over the previous three years), the share price of Samsung and other memory stocks dropped sharply as the market questioned the sustainability of the chip rally and the risk of slower AI infrastructure spending by the major US technology companies.
The earnings season in the US begins next week as the major banks will publish their Q2 financial results.
The main focus of the earnings season will be the publication of the results of the major technology companies, especially the hyperscalers, as attention will turn towards their huge capital expenditure, the returns on these investments, and very importantly, their free cash flow generation.
Across the chip sector, the risk is that following the spectacular upturn in share prices following the strong growth in profitability, expectations of financial analysts are far too high, and a correction in chip companies can affect sentiment across other sectors.
One can expect a period of wide share price fluctuations across several companies as the earnings season unfolds.
Edward Rizzo is executive director at Rizzo, Farrugia & Co. (Stockbrokers) Ltd.
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