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In focus: Europe’s rearmament and prospects for regional defense companies

Defense spending is set to rise further across Europe as the region continues to grapple with simmering geopolitical tensions, providing a favorable outlook for European aerospace and defense industries.

Templeton Global Equity Group (TGEG) conducted preliminary research which indicates improving sector sales and capital returns over the next five years. While we are confident in the outlook, potentially elevated valuations necessitate a strong focus on bottom-up stock selection and price discipline.

Investment outlook

In his “Liberation Day” announcement on April 2, US President Donald Trump unveiled a 10% universal baseline tariff on imports from all countries, with many major trading partners also slapped with higher reciprocal duties. Chinese exports to the United States will face a total levy of 54%; a subsequent US announcement may push this rate up to 104%. Others on the list include Taiwan at 32%, India at 26%, South Korea at 25%, Japan at 24%, the European Union at 20% and the United Kingdom at 10%. As the risks of a global trade war and economic slowdown continue to build up, TGEG will navigate the potentially volatile landscape ahead with attention to bottom-up stock selection and valuation discipline.

In North America, the sweeping Trump tariffs have pushed the average effective levy on US imports to roughly 20%‒25%.1 Initial market reactions were negative, with main US benchmarks suffering the largest pullback since the COVID pandemic. There remains a high degree of uncertainty in the US economic and market outlook. We cannot rule out a recession or even stagflation, complicating the policy-easing path for the US Federal Reserve. Conversely, it is also possible that Trump would change tack and lower the tariffs following further negotiations or lobbying actions.

In Asia, equities will not be immune to volatility as US tariff and recession fears intensify. Regional markets were in a sea of red on the day following Trump’s announcement. While we reiterate our view that policy outcomes remain unpredictable, we are cognizant of the downside risks facing APAC markets. For instance, a 10% universal tariff could impact regional earnings by 3% and stock valuations by 4%, based on an investment bank analysis.2 Given these uncertainties, we may see APAC equities bucking a trend of strong seasonal returns in April

In Europe, US tariffs will similarly grip, but other macroeconomic forces are in motion and may prove supportive of the regional outlook. In addition to the aerospace and defense sector dynamics discussed above, fiscal policy reforms may accelerate, paving the way for stronger economic growth across the region.

Market review: March 2025

Global equities collectively declined in March 2025. As measured by MSCI indexes in US-dollar terms, developed market equities underperformed emerging market and frontier market equities. In terms of investment style, global value stocks fared significantly better than global growth stocks.

US and European stocks retreated amid investor concerns about the US economy, Trump’s trade policy and a broadening trade war. Despite these headwinds, the Chinese market put up a more solid performance, riding on optimism about technology stocks and stimulus measures. On the economic front, global manufacturing activity expanded in March for the third consecutive month, and flash reports for March showed that global services activity continued to grow in several regions.



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