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Global Markets Crushed US Stocks In 2025 - ETFs Investors Are Watching Now

By Chandrima Sanyal | February 10, 2026, 5:01 PM

After a decade-plus reign of U.S. market supremacy, global equities seem to be making a comeback; and with them, ETFs tracking international stocks are increasingly on investors’ radar. The Morningstar Global Markets ex-US Index surged about 32% in 2025, nearly double the 17% return of the U.S. market benchmark, raising the question of whether a broader portfolio rotation might be underway.

ETFs Capturing The Global Momentum

The broad international ETFs have been clear beneficiaries. The SPDR Portfolio Developed World ex-US ETF (NYSE:SPDW), which holds over 2,300 developed-market stocks ex-U.S., climbed more than 30% over the past year. Its exposure to global leaders such as Samsung Electronics, ASML Holding (NASDAQ:ASML) and Roche positions it squarely within the international recovery narrative while maintaining very low fees.

Again, iShares MSCI ACWI ex US ETF (NASDAQ:ACWX) has gained 34% over the past year, which was more than double the gains of State Street SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (NYSE:SPY), which increased 14.7% over the same period.

Value-oriented global strategies are also drawing attention. For instance, the JPMorgan International Value ETF (NASDAQ:JIVE) is up more than 46% in that period, reflecting investor appetite for lower valuations outside the U.S.

Funds such as the BNY Mellon International Equity ETF (NYSE:BKIE), which provides diversified exposure to nearly 1,000 foreign stocks at a lower cost-have picked up the slack. Income-conscious investors, meanwhile, have flocked to dividend-oriented strategies such as the Amplify CWP International Enhanced Dividend Income ETF (NYSE:IDVO), which holds the likes of Alibaba Group Holding Ltd (NYSE:BABA), Novartis (NYSE:NVS), and Taiwan Semiconductor Manufacturing Co Ltd (NYSE:TSM) among higher-yielding global companies.

What's Driving The Shift

Currency dynamics played a big part. A softer U.S. dollar, its sharpest half-year decline since the early 1990s, boosted returns for dollar-based investors holding overseas assets. Simultaneously, international markets had the tailwind of an improving economic momentum across both developed and emerging regions.

Much of the rally was led by Europe, helped by fiscal stimulus and a rebound in financial stocks. Spain’s IBEX 35 jumped around 50% last year, while Germany’s DAX rose about 23%.

But then came the emerging markets to add more fuel. The MSCI Emerging Markets Index returned about 34% in 2025, as South Korea benefited from its lead role in the AI hardware supply chain, while Brazil and Mexico advanced on the shifting global trade dynamics.

Early Days Or Durable Trend?

Strategists increasingly argue this may not be a short-lived trade. Some forecasts suggest continued dollar softness and highlight that international equities still trade at a sizable valuation discount relative to U.S. stocks. “Opportunity still exists in developed ex-U.S. financials given still deep valuation discounts,” said a JPMorgan report from late last year. Higher dividend yields abroad also strengthen the diversification case.

Still, declaring the end of U.S. market leadership might be premature. American tech giants remain dominant, and global risks, from geopolitics to currency volatility, could quickly shift investor sentiment again. Markets, after all, rarely move in straight lines.

For now, though, ETFs offering international exposure are regaining prominence as investors reassess geographic allocations, suggesting that the era of unquestioned U.S. exceptionalism may at least be facing some healthy competition.

Photo: Shutterstock

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