The euro zone debt crisis is showing signs of reaching a solution and investors should be upgrading their outlook on U.K. banks, according to investment firm Liberum Capital.

“For over two years, the U.K. domestic banks have been ‘high risk’ due to the euro zone crisis. However, for the first time during the crisis, there appear to be tentative signs of a potentially lasting solution,” Cormac Leech an analyst at the firm said in a research note.

Continuing speculation regarding another round of quantitative easing from the European Central Bank (ECB) is the reason Leech believes an end could be in sight. Added to that, the apparent acceptance of a recovery strategy by German politicians and the likeliness that Italy and Spain would be willing to meet their austerity packages.

“We expect dissension to ECB QE from the Bundesbank and euro skeptics to dissipate during September and October as the alternatives are explored or publicly debated more thoroughly,” he said.

German Chancellor Angela Merkel said last week that the country was committed to doing everything it can to maintain the common currency.

Markets have since rallied with a consensus that stimulus is just around the corner, even though officials at the ECB and in the German government have poured cold water on reports the ECB will try to cap peripheral bond yields.