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JPMorgan's Top Equity Strategist Just Made The Case For Stocks Outside AI

Published May 14, 2026
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Summary:
  • Paul Quinsee, JPMorgan Asset Management's Global Head of Equities, said international value stocks are now diversifying as far away from US tech as you can get.
  • He pointed to baskets trading at roughly 11 times earnings, with technology making up just 3% to 4% of holdings.
  • Some global stock portfolios are now beating the S&P 500, a reversal after a decade of US tech dominance.

For two years, the Magnificent 7 has been the only trade that mattered.

JPMorgan's top equity strategist just said the smart money is looking elsewhere - and not at the next AI winner.

Why International Value Is Back On The Table

Paul Quinsee, JPMorgan Asset Management's Global Head of Equities, told Bloomberg Television that international value stocks are now as far from technology and the Magnificent 7 as you can get.

His pitch: a portfolio of decent companies trading at roughly 11 times earnings, with tech making up just 3% to 4% of the basket.

That's a different bet from the S&P 500, where the biggest tech names alone account for more than a third of the index.

No AI hype, no chip names. Just steady, profitable companies in Europe, Japan, and other markets US investors have ignored for a decade.

Every morning, Market Briefs breaks down what calls like this mean for your portfolio - in five minutes a day, plus a free investing masterclass when you sign up.

The Math Is Finally Turning

For most of the past decade, "diversify out of US tech" was a losing trade as the Mag 7 kept running and international stocks kept lagging. Anyone who tried to get clever got burned.

JPMorgan's broader 2026 outlook backs up Quinsee's view, flagging Europe, India, and Japan as areas of opportunity. The firm has also been pointing to themes like infrastructure and electrification beyond the AI trade.

When one slice of the market trades at 30+ times earnings and another trades at 11, that gap eventually pulls returns back toward the cheaper side.

The catch: this same call has been wrong for years. It only pays off if the gap actually starts to close, and that timing has been hard to predict.

Worth Noting

This isn't a call that AI is over. It's that the AI-fueled run in US tech may finally be wide enough to create a real payoff for the rest of the world.

The relative-value setup hasn't looked this lopsided in years.

If you want this kind of read on the market every morning, join the investors reading Market Briefs - and get a free 45-minute investing course as a bonus.

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