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From record inflows to 12% drawdown, what went wrong for Europe?

by April 20, 2026
written by April 20, 2026

Three months ago, European investors were pouring money into the continent’s stock markets at a record pace, betting that years of underperformance were finally coming to an end.

The euro was strong, defence stocks were surging, and the valuation gap with the US was too wide to ignore.

Then came the Iran war, the closure of the Strait of Hormuz, and a drone strike on Qatar’s main gas export facility.

Europe, entering this shock with gas storage at its lowest levels in years following a brutal winter, is now staring down its second major energy crisis in four years.

The difference this time is that the tools are fewer, the memory is fresher, and ordinary Europeans are being asked to change how they live and work.

What’s actually happening on the ground

Gas storage across the EU entered April at around 28% capacity, compared to 35% at the same point last year.

Germany’s facilities sit at just 22% full, France at 22%, and the Netherlands has collapsed to just 6%.

The TTF benchmark surged roughly 70% between the start of March and its peak, the strongest monthly gain since September 2021. Brent crude rose by around 50% from the start of the Iran conflict.

The immediate consequence for European households is higher fuel prices, higher heating costs, and a creeping rise in the cost of goods across the supply chain.

Germany announced a temporary fuel tax cut worth around 1.6 billion euros.

Spain halved VAT on most energy sources. Most other countries are rolling out targeted subsidies and price caps.

But economists suggest that these measures will only cushion the blow but won’t address the underlying shock.

Brussels tells people to work from home

Last week, the European Commission formally prepared a package of demand-reduction measures to be presented to heads of state.

The headline recommendation is that businesses should encourage at least one day of compulsory remote working where possible, alongside public transport subsidies and lower VAT on heat pumps and solar panels.

The IEA had already laid the groundwork with its own 10-point emergency plan in March, recommending working from home, lowering highway speed limits by at least 10 km/h, cutting business air travel and reducing private car use.

Three additional remote working days per week, the agency said, could cut individual drivers’ oil consumption by around 20%.

These are recommendations, not legal mandates.

What the Commission is really doing is sending a political signal that the crisis is serious enough to warrant behaviour change, while stopping short of hard emergency measures.

The gas storage fill target for this injection season has already been quietly lowered from 90% to 80%, which tells you something about how Brussels is recalibrating its expectations.

The economic damage is already spreading

Growth forecasts are being cut across the board. The ECB revised euro area GDP growth down to 0.9% for 2026 in its March projections.

Germany’s leading economic institutes have since slashed their forecast further to just 0.6%, down from 1.3% before the crisis.

Inflation jumped from 1.9% in February to 2.5% in March, recording its sharpest month-on-month increase since October 2022.

Goldman Sachs now projects headline inflation peaking at 3.2% in the second quarter.

Markets are pricing an 84% probability of an ECB rate hike somewhere in 2026, a complete reversal from early in the year when cuts were firmly on the table.

This is the cruellest part of the dilemma.

The ECB cannot easily cut rates into a re-accelerating inflation picture, but hiking into an energy-driven supply shock risks choking an economy that is already slowing.

Europe walked this tightrope in 2022 and ended up in a mild recession by early 2023.

Businesses and consumers remember that, and they are getting skittish faster this time.

What this means for investors

The investment picture has shifted materially and quickly.

At the start of 2026, European equity funds were enjoying record inflows.

By its March low, the Stoxx 600 had fallen nearly 12% from its pre-conflict level, while the S&P 500 dropped only 8% and has since recovered to new record highs. Europe has not.

BlackRock has reined in its bullishness, with its international CIO for fundamental equities stating:

You can’t make these big proclamations that Europe looks cheap now.

The firm moved to an overweight position on US stocks this week.

The valuation gap that made Europe so attractive has largely closed, and the energy crisis has reintroduced exactly the macro drag that European equities have historically struggled with.

Consumer-facing sectors are getting squeezed from multiple directions: energy bills, still-elevated borrowing costs, and weakening confidence.

The pockets that remain attractive, chiefly defence, banks and some semiconductor names, are becoming crowded.

If sentiment turns on one of those concentrated sectors, the broader market absorbs the hit fast.

The more constructive long-term argument is that a crisis of this scale could force European governments to accelerate investment in energy infrastructure in a way that years of political debate have failed to achieve.

That is a genuine thesis, but a 2028 story, not a 2026 one.

The problem Europe keeps not solving

What makes this moment uncomfortable is not the shock itself. It is how predictable it was.

After stripping away Russian pipeline dependency following the Ukraine war, Europe rebuilt its supply chain around LNG, with Qatar and the US as the dominant new suppliers.

Qatar’s output runs through the Strait of Hormuz. One geopolitical flashpoint, and the vulnerability is immediately exposed again.

The ceasefire diplomacy around Iran is buying some time, and gas prices have pulled back from their March peak.

But storage needs to be rebuilt through the summer, Qatari infrastructure will take months or years to fully repair, and the winter of 2026-27 is already casting a long shadow.

Every crisis generates the rhetoric of energy independence.

The question is whether this one finally generates the investment to match.

The post From record inflows to 12% drawdown, what went wrong for Europe? appeared first on Invezz

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