February proved to be a constructive month for most asset classes but, as with much of the past year, the headline outcome masked a number of important cross‑currents beneath the surface. Global markets delivered positive returns overall, yet the magnitude of those returns varied materially. Leadership moved away from the familiar dominance of large US technology stocks, volatility increased, and investors became noticeably more selective in how and where they were prepared to deploy capital.
At a high level, the most striking feature of the month was the outperformance of non-US equity markets relative to the United States, a trend that had been building in recent months but without a clear breakout until now.[1] Global equities in aggregate rose, but US shares were the laggard. This divergence was mirrored across styles: value stocks rose strongly while growth stocks fell, suggesting that investors are increasingly uncomfortable paying high prices for long dated growth when rapid technological advances are raising uncertainty about who the eventual winners will be in the coming years, let alone decades.[2] This rotation did not reflect a collapse in confidence, but rather a growing preference for earnings visibility, tangible assets, and more immediate cash generation.
The source of this change in tone lay largely in the ongoing reassessment of artificial intelligence (AI). AI remains a powerful long term structural theme, but February marked another step in the market’s transition from broad enthusiasm to more discriminating judgement. During the US earnings season, many of the largest technology companies once again reported robust revenues and profits. However, these results were accompanied by announcements of further significant capital expenditure on AI infrastructure.[3] For a sector already spending vast sums on this buildout, and where valuations had risen sharply in anticipation of future benefits, this prompted increasingly uncomfortable questions around returns on invested capital and the timing of any meaningful payoff.
Outside the US, the picture was initially more encouraging. Risk assets in Europe delivered positive returns, supported by signs that economic momentum was gradually improving. Business surveys pointed to a modest acceleration in activity, with manufacturing indicators reaching multi-month highs.[4] Inflation continued to ease, falling below central bank targets, allowing the European Central Bank to keep policy on hold while maintaining a reassuringly calm tone.[5] However, events that unfolded in the Middle East late in the month disrupted this narrative. As a major energy importer, Europe saw a lower material repricing as markets reassessed energy security and inflation risks.

