Every few years investors rediscover something that should have been obvious all along. Right now that rediscovery is happening in international value stocks. After more than a decade of near-religious devotion to U.S. growth stocks, investors are finally beginning to notice that the rest of the developed world did not stop producing profitable companies simply because Silicon Valley captured the market’s imagination.

For most of the last 15 years, global investors have behaved like baseball fans who insist the only real teams play in the American League East. Everything else, apparently, is just background noise. Money poured into U.S. mega-cap growth stocks with almost no regard for valuation while large, profitable companies in Europe and Japan were quietly left sitting in the bargain bin.

This is not a subtle difference in pricing. The valuation gap between U.S. stocks and developed international markets has become one of the widest in decades. The S&P 500 trades at a premium multiple while many European and Japanese companies trade at far lower earnings multiples despite producing solid cash flows, maintaining strong balance sheets and in many cases paying healthy dividends.

Institutional research houses are beginning to notice what value investors have been saying for years. Franklin Templeton recently argued that international value stocks are entering a new cycle of outperformance. ClearBridge has pointed to improving fundamentals and still-attractive valuations across developed markets. Morningstar and Schwab have also noted that earnings growth outside the United States may begin to outpace that of U.S. companies in the coming years.

None of this should come as a shock. It is simply what happens when investors chase the same trade for too long. When capital crowds into one narrow part of the market, everything else becomes relatively cheap.

And right now, “everything else” includes some very large and very profitable companies in Europe and Japan.

European equities are particularly interesting. The region’s stock market has a far heavier weighting in industrial companies, financial institutions, energy producers, and global manufacturing firms. These businesses are not exciting in the way that artificial intelligence chip designers are exciting, but they generate real cash flow and often return a significant portion of it to shareholders through dividends.

Many of these firms are global leaders in their industries. European manufacturers dominate segments of aerospace, luxury goods, chemicals, industrial automation and specialty engineering. Banks across the region have also spent the last decade repairing their balance sheets after the financial crisis and now operate with far stronger capital ratios. Yet despite these improvements, European equities continue to trade at a meaningful discount to U.S. stocks.

Japan may be even more compelling.

For decades Japan was the poster child for corporate stagnation. Companies hoarded cash, shareholder returns were minimal, and corporate governance left much to be desired. That story has changed dramatically over the last several years. Japanese regulators and the Tokyo Stock Exchange have pushed aggressively for reforms that encourage better capital allocation and higher returns on equity.

Companies have responded by increasing dividends, initiating share buybacks and paying closer attention to shareholder value. Balance sheets remain among the strongest in the world and many Japanese companies still trade at modest valuation multiples despite improving profitability.

The result is a market that offers something increasingly rare in today’s environment: profitable companies trading at reasonable prices.

Of course, convincing American investors to look overseas has always been a challenge. The home-country bias in U.S. portfolios is legendary. Investors who would never dream of buying a U.S. stock trading at 25 or 30 times earnings seem perfectly comfortable doing exactly that, provided the company has a Silicon Valley address and a compelling narrative about artificial intelligence.

Meanwhile, a profitable European industrial firm trading at 12 times earnings and paying a healthy dividend is apparently far too boring to consider.

This behavior would be amusing if it were not so predictable. Investors have always preferred exciting stories to simple arithmetic. Growth stocks with a compelling narrative attract capital even when valuations stretch beyond reason, while steady businesses producing real cash flow are dismissed as dull.

Value investors understand that dull can be profitable.

What matters over time is not which companies generate the most headlines but which ones produce earnings relative to the price investors pay for those earnings. By that simple measure, many developed international markets look far more attractive than the United States today.

The valuation gap alone should give investors pause. U.S. equities have enjoyed a remarkable run, driven largely by a handful of dominant technology companies. That success has pushed index valuations higher and higher. International markets, on the other hand, never experienced the same degree of multiple expansion.

That leaves investors with a simple choice.

They can continue chasing expensive growth stocks in an already crowded market, hoping that the next great technology narrative justifies ever higher valuations.

Or they can look abroad at developed markets where strong companies trade at reasonable prices, pay meaningful dividends and operate in industries that actually generate cash today rather than promises about tomorrow.

History suggests that valuation eventually matters. Periods when U.S. growth stocks dominate global markets have occurred before. They are usually followed by periods when neglected value stocks elsewhere in the world quietly deliver superior returns.

The early 2000s offered a perfect example. After the technology bubble burst, international value stocks significantly outperformed U.S. equities for several years. Investors who diversified globally at that time were rewarded, while those who remained concentrated in expensive U.S. growth stocks endured a long stretch of disappointment.

We may be approaching a similar turning point today.

None of this means investors should abandon the United States entirely. The American economy remains one of the most dynamic in the world and many excellent companies trade here. But portfolios that ignore developed international markets are leaving a large portion of the global opportunity set on the table.

For investors willing to look beyond their home market, Europe and Japan currently offer something that has become increasingly rare in modern equity markets.

Reasonable prices, solid businesses and dependable dividends.

In other words, the very things investors claim to want but somehow keep ignoring while they chase the latest fashionable growth story closer to home.

See the Top Ranked Stocks Built to Outperform in Volatility

Broad indexes are chopping. Leadership is shifting. Benzinga's ranking system isolates the small number of stocks gaining strength beneath the surface, even as volatility shakes out weaker names. Edge members can see exactly which sectors and tickers are rising now. See Today's Rankings

Nomura Holdings

Nomura Holdings (NYSE:NMR) is one of Japan’s largest financial institutions and a global investment bank that operates across wealth management, asset management, and wholesale capital markets. While American investors chase every new fintech story trading at nosebleed multiples, Nomura sits quietly trading at a modest valuation despite improving profitability and a stronger balance sheet. The firm has benefited from rising interest rates in Japan, improving capital markets activity, and growing wealth management assets across Asia. It also pays a solid dividend and has been steadily improving returns on equity as Japan’s financial system normalizes after decades of near-zero rates. In other words, a real bank with real earnings trading at a reasonable price. No AI buzzwords required.

Hafnia Ltd.

Hafnia Ltd. (NYSE:HAFN) is one of the world’s leading operators of product tankers, transporting refined petroleum products such as gasoline, diesel, and jet fuel around the globe. Shipping is not glamorous, which is precisely why the sector occasionally offers remarkable value. Hafnia operates a modern fleet and has benefited from strong tanker markets driven by shifting global energy trade routes and refinery dislocations. Cash flows have surged in recent years, allowing the company to pay out significant dividends to shareholders. Yet despite strong earnings and healthy balance sheet metrics, the stock still trades at a modest valuation. Investors seem far more interested in speculative growth stories than companies that literally move the fuel powering the global economy.

Cementir Holding

Cementir Holding (NYSE:CMBT) is an Italian multinational cement and building materials producer with operations across Europe, North America, and Asia. The company manufactures cement, ready-mix concrete, and other construction materials used in infrastructure and commercial development projects. Cementir benefits from steady demand tied to construction activity and infrastructure spending, particularly in Europe where governments are investing heavily in energy transition projects and industrial modernization. Despite producing solid cash flow and maintaining a strong balance sheet, the stock trades at a valuation that would make many U.S. investors blink in disbelief if it were listed in New York with a Silicon Valley zip code. Instead, it quietly compounds value while the market looks elsewhere.

NatWest Group

NatWest Group (NYSE:NWG) is one of the United Kingdom’s largest retail and commercial banking franchises, serving millions of customers across the UK through its NatWest, Royal Bank of Scotland, and Ulster Bank brands. After years of restructuring following the global financial crisis, the bank now operates with strong capital ratios, improved profitability, and a focused domestic banking model. Rising interest rates have boosted net interest margins, driving stronger earnings and allowing NatWest to return significant capital to shareholders through dividends and buybacks. Yet despite these improvements, the stock trades at a valuation that suggests investors remain permanently skeptical of European banks. That skepticism, as value investors know well, is often exactly where opportunity lives.

Image via Shutterstock