In Feynman diagram calculations, we seem to invariably Euclideanise loop integrals in order to exploit the resulting spherical symmetry. This Wick rotation is simply a deformation of the contour; providing we avoid all poles and providing our integrand falls off at infinity sufficiently fast, this is legitimate. See, for instance, Figure 6.1 of Peskin & Schroeder.
However, when looking at the integral at face value, in Minkowski space, it sometimes appears that the integral is divergent (or at least, not absolutely convergent), even if the above analysis suggests everything is kosher. Consider, for instance, the 2D integral
$$ \int \mathrm{d}^2k \frac{1}{(k^2 + i \epsilon)^2} \,. $$
The integrand does not fall off along the line $k^0 = k^1$, which stretches out to infinity. Indeed, if we demand that the absolute value of the integrand be larger than some numer $\delta > 0$, we find an infinite area region that extends along this line. So the integral is not absolutely convergent. On the other hand, the Euclideanised integral is absolutely convergent.
Question: is there some analytic subtelty in performing this Wick rotation that is typically overlooked? And if so, why doesn't it impact the calculations we go on to perform? If the Wick rotation is implicitly serving as some form of regularisation, is it obvious that the physical observables we compute are independent of this regularisation?