×

Analysis-Investors pile into US stocks as ‘TINA’ revival knocks ‘TIARA’ trades

By Thomson Reuters Apr 19, 2026 | 4:14 AM

By Amanda Cooper and Samuel Indyk

LONDON, April 19 (Reuters) – The U.S.-Iran ceasefire in early April appears to have revived so-called TINA (“There Is No Alternative”) trades, driven by peace hopes, soaring U.S. earnings growth and the relative insulation of the world’s biggest economy to an energy shock.

Over the last year, investors, particularly in the United States, had sought out cheaper markets abroad where returns were juiced up by a weaker dollar. Enthusiasm over the AI boom ​and expansive government spending has also boosted equities, from Seoul and Tokyo to Frankfurt and London.

The war and ensuing surge in energy prices hurt confidence ‌and risk markets. But U.S. President Donald Trump’s April 7 ceasefire announcement has sent Wall Street shares to record highs again.

Global investors have poured a net $28 billion into U.S. equities since the eve of the ceasefire announcement, with U.S. investors alone accounting for nearly $23 billion of that total, according to LSEG/Lipper data.

Until that point in the year, they had pulled a net $56 billion out of U.S. stocks, including a net outflow of almost $90 billion by U.S.-based investors.

The ceasefire has sharpened focus on which markets have the strongest outlook, and early signals from earnings season suggest the U.S. remains robust.

While most major equity markets have erased ‌their war-driven ​losses, the S&P 500 is 2% above pre-war levels.

“We’ve had our fourth exogenous shock in six years and given ⁠the nature of the shock, it’s not surprising that ⁠we go back to the economy that has performed the best over the very long-term, is investing the most in the short-term and is producing the best set of results,” said Michael Browne, global investment strategist at the Franklin Templeton Institute in London.

“TINA” prevailed for years as U.S. shares climbed to record highs but suffered a setback around the January 2025 start of Trump’s second term, with investors pivoting to a “TIARA” trade – “There Is A Real Alternative” – that favoured Europe and emerging markets in ​particular.

“I like to say there’s something called ‘TINA’,” said Gabriel Shahin, founder of Falcon Wealth Planning, which manages roughly $1.4 billion. “Investors are looking at the resilience of the S&P and realising the engine is still humming.”

The U.S.’s status as a net energy exporter, compared with European countries and others like Japan, has helped Wall Street recover more quickly from the ⁠post-war market turbulence.

Friday’s announcement by Iranian Foreign Minister Abbas Araqchi that the Strait of Hormuz was open ⁠following a ceasefire accord agreed in Lebanon helped propel global stocks higher.

A ROUND TRIP ACROSS THE WORLD

Jim Caron, chief investment officer at ​Morgan Stanley Investment Management, which manages nearly $2 trillion, told a virtual roundtable on April 10 there had been a shift from the 2025 consensus view that European would outperform U.S. ​stocks.

“We do not, any longer, think that is the case. In fact, we’re taking actions in portfolios, and we’re discussing this, and we’re ‌thinking about making a move towards reducing our European overweight to actually even going towards underweight Europe in favour of going overweight the U.S.,” he said.

A number of major investment banks upgraded U.S. equities to “overweight” from “neutral” in recent days, citing resilient corporate earnings – particularly in the technology sector – that could cushion the fallout from the Middle East conflict.

First-quarter earnings so far show some sectors, such as energy and banks, have fared well, while others grapple with the impact of the war. LSEG/IBES data shows first-quarter earnings growth for S&P 500 companies is ⁠expected to be nearly 14%, while European earnings are forecast to grow by 4.2%, mostly thanks to the oil and gas sectors.

“We started the year with a more positive approach to the U.S. than others,” said Browne at the Franklin Templeton Institute. “Clearly what’s happened, whether it (the war) stops tomorrow or not, is going to have more of an impact ⁠on the European and some Asian economies than it is on ‌the U.S. economy.”

The International Monetary Fund on Tuesday shaved its 2026 U.S. growth estimate by just one-tenth of a percentage point ⁠to 2.3%, but lowered euro zone growth estimate by 0.2 percentage points to 1.1%.

Investors have cut exposure to popular trades such ​as Europe and ‌Asian emerging markets since the ceasefire announcement.

A Bank of America weekly report on Friday, citing EPFR data, showed South Korean ​equity funds posted ⁠a record outflow of $2.5 billion in the week to April 15, while European stocks posted a $4.7 billion outflow, the largest since November 2024.

U.S. equities are still showing a cumulative net outflow of $30 billion in 2026, but that is almost a quarter of what it was in mid-March, according to LSEG data.

The S&P index’s burst past 7,000 this week marked a gain of more than 10% in 11 days, faster even than the bounce-back after Trump’s “Liberation Day” tariff announcement in April 2025 shook global markets, according to Deutsche Bank strategist Jim Reid.

“Excluding overlaps, such rapid gains are a relatively rare occurrence, with the S&P 500 achieving a 10%+ rally in 11 sessions only 15 times this century,” Reid said.

(Additional reporting by Laura Matthews in New ​York; Editing by Dhara Ranasinghe and Catherine Evans)