HSBC has officially turned bullish on US stocks, upgrading its stance to “overweight” from “neutral.” The strategic shift comes as the global narrative pivots away from geopolitical anxiety—specifically the US-Israel-Iran conflict—and back toward fundamental corporate performance.
Despite the broader market volatility seen throughout April 2026, HSBC’s analysts argue that “we’re not buying geopolitics; we’re buying earnings.“
The Bull Case: Why HSBC is Upgrading
The upgrade is driven by three primary pillars: earnings beats, buyback tailwinds, and seasonal strength.
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Earnings Superiority: Nearly 30% of S&P 500 companies have reported Q1 2026 results. Of those, 84% have beaten expectations by an average of 12%, significantly higher than the five-year average.
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The Buyback Engine: Corporate buybacks are providing a massive technical floor for prices. S&P 500 buyback announcements have totaled $430 billion year-to-date, marking a 20% increase year-on-year.
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Geopolitical Resilience: While the recovery from the recent Middle East escalation took longer than usual (six weeks vs. the historical one-month average), market focus has returned to the tech and AI sectors, which now represent nearly 50% of the S&P 500’s market cap.
Sector Preferences & Geographic Shifts
As part of this “turbo bullish” outlook on US risk assets, HSBC has adjusted its global exposure:
| Sector/Region | Rating Change | Strategic Rationale |
| US Equities | Overweight | Strong earnings momentum and AI-driven growth. |
| Europe (ex-UK) | Neutral | Downgraded due to weaker economic activity and higher energy price risk. |
| India | Underweight | Downgraded as rising crude oil prices (above $100) cloud the earnings recovery. |
| Basic Materials | Overweight | Global upgrade based on strong earnings revisions and a “commodity squeeze.” |
Preferred Sectors: HSBC continues to favor sectors with low commodity input costs, specifically Banks, Insurance, and Technology.
Key Risks to Watch
While the outlook is optimistic, HSBC cautions that the rally could pause by mid-May if certain catalysts don’t materialize:
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Oil & Energy Prices: Elevated prices remain a risk for sectors with high input costs.
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Strait of Hormuz: A durable ceasefire between the US and Iran is seen as a major potential boost, particularly for easing global energy supply concerns.
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Interest Rate Expectations: Strong US labor market data continues to fuel the potential for upward surprises in interest rates, which could challenge high valuations.
The Bottom Line: HSBC believes the US market’s fundamental strength—led by tech and massive capital returns to shareholders—outweighs the current geopolitical “noise.” For investors, the recommendation is to focus on quality large-caps that can absorb higher energy costs while benefiting from the ongoing AI transition.
