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šEarnings Season Begins with Major Banks Beating Expectations
Issue #1 TIA Market Recap
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This Weekās Market Forecast⦠š
In January at Davos, the buzzword on every investorās lips was US Exceptionalism. Bankers and asset managers alike leaned into the belief that under Trump we would see a business-friendly president who would deliver tax cuts and deregulation. The thesis was simple: pro-growth policy would boost equity returns in the US market.
But that conviction didnāt last long. By late March, Trumpās tariff rhetoric escalated, culminating in the āreciprocal tariffsā announced on April 2. Almost overnight, the same voices who had been pounding the table on US stocks flipped. The new narrative was āeverywhere but the USā ā Europe, Asia, and emerging markets were suddenly the supposed safe havens.
Yes, Europe and Asia put up solid numbers in Q1 and parts of Q2. But since mid-April, no major market has come close to the US in terms of performance. The idea of US Exceptionalism has proven more durable than its critics expected.
The bond market tells a similar story. In the spring, rising yields reflected fears that foreign investors would dump Treasuries in retaliation for tariffs. The 30-year briefly touched 5%, and many feared the 10-year would follow. Instead, the 10-year has been range-bound between 4.25ā4.50% for months, and now sits closer to 4%. That stability underscores the USās role as the worldās safe haven.
Meanwhile, Europeās fundamentals are catching up to them. All summer, the chorus was āinvest in Europe.ā I never understood the herd mentality. Europe remains shackled by heavy regulation, sluggish innovation, and anemic earnings growth. There was never a clear catalyst for why corporate numbers would materially improve. Recent turmoil in European sovereign bonds ā rates rising on fiscal stress and weak growth ā highlights those structural cracks.
In contrast, the US continues to attract capital. Last weekās flight out of European debt and back into Treasuries reaffirmed the core point: US Exceptionalism is alive and well.
When allocating capital today, the choice is clear. The US remains the worldās deepest, most innovative, and most resilient market.
Have a wonderful week!!
Top ETFs on our Radar⦠š

iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF
The iShares Expanded Tech-Software Sector ETF has performed exceptionally well this year. Software companies have shown strong performance as investors seek to identify the next big winner in AI.
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Thanks for reading and have a great week!
-Ryan
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