Alphabet Inc. (GOOG) (GOOGL) is having a fantastic year. Up 66% year-to-date, Google's parent company is winning the Magnificent Seven race by a comfortable margin. That's a decisive victory over Nvidia Corp. (NVDA), which managed a still-respectable 42% gain.
But here's the thing about declaring victory: there's always someone doing better, and this year that someone was almost everywhere except U.S. mega-cap tech.
Eight country ETFs tracking stocks from around the world have quietly outperformed Alphabet in 2025. These aren't obscure corner cases either. We're talking about full country equity markets spanning emerging economies and developed European nations, all delivering returns that make even Alphabet's stellar year look modest.
It's a vivid reminder that the best investment story of the year wasn't necessarily written in Silicon Valley.
The Global Winners That Beat Big Tech
According to data from CountryETFtracker, here are the eight country ETFs that topped Alphabet's 66% return:
8. iShares MSCI South Africa ETF (EZA), up 67.3%
7. iShares MSCI Austria ETF (EWO), up 67.9%
6. Global X - MSCI Colombia ETF (COLO), up 68.5%
5. iShares MSCI Poland ETF (EPOL), up 68.6%
4. iShares MSCI Spain ETF (EWP), up 73%
3. Global X - MSCI Greece ETF (GREK), up 77%
2. iShares MSCI Peru and Global Exposure ETF (EPU), up 85%
1. iShares MSCI South Korea ETF (EWY), up 87%
South Korea at the top with an 87% gain. Peru close behind at 85%. Greece clocking in at 77%. These aren't the usual suspects when investors think about blockbuster returns.
When Commodities Rewrite the Playbook
At least three of these top performers share a common thread: commodities went absolutely bonkers this year.
South Africa, Colombia, and Peru all rode a massive surge in precious and industrial metals. Silver exploded 160% year-to-date. Gold climbed nearly 70%. Even metals most people don't think about often, like platinum and palladium, posted gains of 170% and 110% respectively.
For equity markets heavily exposed to mining, this created a cascade of gains.
In South Africa, miners dominated the leaderboard. AngloGold Ashanti Plc (AU) and Gold Fields Limited Sponsored ADR (GFI), both top holdings in the EZA ETF, have each surged more than 220% this year.
Currency movements added another layer of fuel. The South African rand strengthened more than 11% against the dollar, putting it on track for its best year since 2009.
Peru followed almost exactly the same script. Six mining companies rank among the top 10 holdings in the EPU ETF, and each has posted triple-digit gains so far this year. The Peruvian sol gained over 10% against the dollar, on track for its strongest performance since Peru's Central Bank issued the new currency back in 1997.
These are markets that investors often dismiss as too cyclical or too volatile. But when commodities turn into a powerful tailwind, those cyclical bets can deliver returns that make tech stocks look boring.
Southern Europe's Banking Renaissance
Southern Europe added another unexpected chapter to 2025's investment story. Countries like Spain and Greece have benefited from something many investors had given up waiting for: a genuine banking sector rebound.
Even Italy, which didn't crack the top eight, still posted a 51% gain year-to-date.
In Greece, the three largest holdings of the GREK ETF are all banks: National Bank of Greece, Eurobank, and Alpha Bank. Their shares are up 85%, 68%, and 133% respectively in 2025.
Spain tells a remarkably similar story. Banco Santander S.A. (SAN), which carries roughly an 18% weight in the EWP ETF, has climbed an eye-popping 129% year-to-date.
These are sectors that spent decades underperforming after the European debt crisis. Higher interest margins, cleaned-up balance sheets, and renewed investor confidence finally combined to lift stocks many had written off as permanently broken.
The banks that survived the crisis are now thriving in ways few expected just a couple years ago.
How South Korea Claimed the Top Spot
South Korea's 87% rally came from a source that should feel familiar to anyone watching U.S. tech: artificial intelligence and semiconductors.
Chipmakers tied to AI infrastructure drove nearly all the upside. Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd (SSNLF) and SK Hynix together account for about 40% of the EWY portfolio. Their shares have jumped 123% and 250% year-to-date, respectively.
The move mirrors the global surge in demand for memory chips and AI infrastructure, but with far more leverage than U.S. megacaps. While American investors were debating whether Nvidia could maintain its momentum, South Korean chipmakers were quietly delivering returns that made even Nvidia's rally look tame.
What This Means for Investors
The lesson here isn't that Alphabet had a bad year. A 66% gain is exceptional by any reasonable standard, and topping the rest of the Magnificent Seven is nothing to dismiss.
But the global markets proved something important this year: opportunity doesn't stop at U.S. borders. While investors fixated on a narrow group of American tech giants, other markets were quietly delivering even better returns.
Commodities, European banks, and Korean chipmakers all found their moment in 2025. For investors willing to look beyond the familiar names, the rewards were substantial.




