Stock Markets June 12, 2026 05:34 AM

Citi Cuts Europe Growth Outlook, Repositions Sector Ratings as Inflation Risks Rise

Bank lowers Industrials, Travel & Leisure and Financial Services ratings while keeping 2026 Stoxx 600 target and setting a mid-2027 goal

By Maya Rios
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Citi Research adjusted its European sector weightings and trimmed its euro-zone growth outlook amid commodity-driven inflationary pressures linked to the Iran conflict. The broker downgraded Travel & Leisure and Financial Services, moved Industrials to neutral and left its end-2026 Stoxx 600 target unchanged at 640 while adding a mid-2027 target of 700. Citi raised its 2026 EPS forecast for the STOXX 600 but still sits below market consensus, and cut its 2026 euro-zone GDP projection to 0.7%.

Citi Cuts Europe Growth Outlook, Repositions Sector Ratings as Inflation Risks Rise
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Key Points

  • Citi downgraded Travel & Leisure and Financial Services to "underweight" and moved Industrials to "neutral" while maintaining an end-2026 Stoxx 600 target of 640 and adding a mid-2027 target of 700.
  • Citi raised its 2026 EPS forecast for the STOXX 600 to 12% (from 8%), but this remains below bottom-up consensus of 16%; Energy is expected to account for roughly one-third of 2026 EPS growth.
  • The bank cut its 2026 euro-zone GDP growth forecast to 0.7%, expects higher HICP inflation through year-end, and anticipates two ECB rate hikes in June and July taking the deposit rate to 2.50%.

Citi Research has reworked its sector recommendations for European equities, downgrading Travel & Leisure and Financial Services to "underweight" and lowering Industrials to "neutral," citing weak earnings momentum and stretched valuations. The broker left its end-2026 Stoxx 600 target unchanged at 640 and published a new mid-2027 target of 700.

Within cyclical sectors, Citi retained "overweight" ratings on Technology, Banks and Basic Resources, while among defensives it kept Health Care and Personal Goods at "overweight." The firm also upgraded Chemicals and Media - sectors it described as having been previously unloved - as part of a broader recalibration of European equity positioning.

On earnings, Citi Research raised its forecast for the pan-European STOXX 600 to 12% EPS growth for 2026, up from a prior projection of 8%. That upgraded view, however, remains below bottom-up analyst consensus of 16%. Citi said this shortfall reflects its expectation that earnings downgrades for non-commodity sectors will materialise in the second half of 2026.

For the U.K., Citi expects FTSE 100 EPS to increase 22% in 2026, a projection it described as broadly in line with consensus. The broker then expects a further 9% EPS rise in 2027, compared with the market's 7% estimate.

Citi's economists signalled that geopolitical developments involving Iran have pushed the global economy toward a stagflationary mix, with oil prices initially moving toward $120 per barrel. In response to that supply shock and its inflationary implications, the firm cut its 2026 euro-zone GDP growth forecast to 0.7%.

Inflation expectations were also revised: Citi anticipates Harmonised Index of Consumer Prices (HICP) inflation to average 3.0% this year and to accelerate to 3.5% by the end of the year. Against those inflation dynamics, the broker expects the European Central Bank to raise the deposit facility rate by two 25-basis-point moves in June and July, taking it to 2.50%.

Energy has become a prominent contributor to Citi's EPS mix. The broker estimated that Energy would represent roughly one-third of overall 2026 EPS growth for the STOXX 600, with the sector carrying a consensus EPS growth estimate of around 70%. Autos and Basic Resources were also cited as sectors with strong EPS forecasts, while Consumer Discretionary was highlighted as continuing to experience meaningful downgrades.

Valuation metrics remain a key consideration for the house view. The Stoxx 600 was trading at a 12-month forward consensus price-to-earnings ratio of approximately 14x, close to its 15-year median. Citi noted that European equities are trading at about a 30% forward PE discount to the United States, a level well below the historical median discount of 15%.

To gauge broader market vulnerability, Citi published its Bear Market Checklist: the firm reported 10 out of 18 red flags globally. By comparison, the checklist read 11.5 out of 18 for the U.S. and 5 out of 18 for Europe, indicating Citi's view that valuation-driven risks are relatively heightened on a global basis.

On currency, Citi expects EUR/USD to move toward 1.14 in the second half of 2026. The bank said markets are likely to shift their focus from relative inflation to relative growth dynamics, favouring the U.S. on the back of anticipated artificial intelligence-driven growth tailwinds and energy independence.


What this means for investors

  • Sector exposure should be adjusted to reflect weaker earnings prospects in Travel & Leisure, Financial Services and Consumer Discretionary, while Energy, Autos and Basic Resources may provide outsized contributions to aggregate EPS growth.
  • Higher inflation and central bank tightening in Europe imply that interest-sensitive sectors could face pressure, even as headline EPS forecasts are revised up due to commodity sector strength.
  • Valuation spreads versus the U.S. remain wide, which could influence relative allocation decisions across global equity portfolios.

Risks

  • Geopolitical tensions involving Iran have created stagflationary pressures, pushing oil prices up and elevating inflationary risk - particularly affecting Energy and broadly inflation-sensitive sectors.
  • Citi expects earnings downgrades in non-commodity sectors to emerge in the second half of 2026, posing downside risk to sectors such as Consumer Discretionary, Travel & Leisure and Financial Services.
  • European equities trade at a large forward PE discount to the U.S.; if valuation re-rating dynamics change, relative performance between regions could shift, impacting global portfolio allocations.

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