The two great European energy investment cycles: oil stocks driven by Brent crude, and renewable energy stocks driven by the EUR 10-year interest rate. Both have produced extraordinary returns — but with very different timing, duration and risk profiles.
The Renewable Energy Cycle (EUR 10-Year Rate Signal)
European renewable energy stocks — Nibe, Verbund, Ørsted, Solaria — are driven primarily by the EUR 10-year rate. When rates fall below 1.5%, the discount rate for long-dated renewable energy cash flows decreases, dramatically increasing the present value of wind and solar projects. The 2014–2023 low-rate cycle produced some of the largest long-term returns in European equity markets.
| Stock | Return | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Solaria (Madrid) | +1,400% | 105 mnd |
| Nibe (Stockholm) | +1,218% | 105 mnd |
| Ørsted (Copenhagen) | +711% | 105 mnd |
| Verbund (Wien) | +555% | 105 mnd |
The Oil Cycle (Brent Signal)
Oil stocks are driven by Brent crude — a faster, more volatile cycle than interest rates. The 2020–2022 oil cycle delivered strong returns but over a shorter timeframe. Current status: Brent at $104 — SELL threshold reached as of March 2026.
| Stock | Return | Duration |
|---|---|---|
| Aker BP | +388% | 87 mnd |
| Equinor | +196% | 74 mnd |
| TotalEnergies | +143% | 74 mnd |
| Repsol | +99% | 27 mnd |
The Verdict
Renewables win on absolute return (Solaria +1,400% vs Aker BP +388%) but the cycles are much longer — 8–10 years vs 3–5 years for oil. Renewables require more patience but reward it generously. Oil cycles are faster and more tradeable. The EUR 10-year rate is currently at 2.6% — well above the BUY threshold of 1.5%, meaning the renewable cycle is not yet at a new buy signal. Brent is at the SELL threshold. Both suggest waiting for the next cycle entry rather than buying either sector today.