
BofA warns European stocks may be headed for a crash: find out more

Europe-focused funds shed more than $1.5 billion over the past week alone, marking a 5th straight week of sustained withdrawals.
With the STOXX Europe 600 trading at around 13.5 times earnings (forward), and failing to attract buyers despite a historical discount to US markets, investors are reassessing the region’s equity risk premium.
BofA’s bearish call on European stocks
BofA raised the siren on regional stocks primarily due to a collapse in its European Momentum Conviction Indicator (MCI) – a proprietary metric that tracks the underlying strength of recent stock performance and projects future trajectory.
According to BofA’s strategists led by Paulina Strzelinska, the MCI currently sits at an “alarming” 17, deeply inside the critical danger zone threshold of 30.
Historically a reading at or below this level forecasts a heightened risk of a 12-month momentum crash within a tight four- to eight-week window.
Importantly, the signal is driven by all three of the indicator’s primary inputs: an increase in implied volatility, erratic momentum volatility, and an elevated trend reversal risk.
Momentum is a major factor for machine learning and quantitative funds, which rely heavily on these precise signals to model investment strategies and size portfolio allocations.
When these signals break down, systematic funds are forced to unwind positions, often triggering algorithmic selling pressure that can overwhelm fundamental buyers.
Fundamentals aren’t favouring EU stocks either
The current technical dip points directly to a volatility-driven regime-shift risk, alongside evidence of rapid trend acceleration.
While Strzelinska observed the environment hasn’t yet reached a “full-blown momentum bubble,” the data suggest that quantitative models are derisking their European exposure.
This technical vulnerability is compounded by an unfavourable fundamental backdrop across the continent.
European corporate earnings projections remain notably sluggish, with year-on-year earnings per share (EPS) growth for the STOXX 600 forecast at a rather muted 4.5% this year.
Stripped of the “rapid growth” seen in the US tech sector, European stocks lack the fundamental bedrock required to withstand a sustained algorithmic sell-off.
This convergence of breaking momentum and stagnant corporate growth creates a fragile environment, leaving risk assets uniquely exposed to negative macroeconomic catalysts.
Bond market jitters exacerbate the setup
The BofA warning mirrors broader apprehension across capital markets as investors express concern over an imminent correction.
The primary driver of this unease is the increasingly unsustainable divergence between bond yields and stock market pricing.
Neil Birrell, chief investment officer at Premier Miton Investors, emphasized the deeply conflicted signaling currently prevailing between fixed income and equities.
Highlighting these “diverging views” on the macro backdrop, Birrell argues it is merely a matter of time before recent, pronounced volatility in the bond market spills directly over into stocks.
With capital already retreating and key technical supports fracturing, European equities appear distinctly vulnerable to a severe and rapid repricing event.
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