Economy April 13, 2026 02:01 PM

BlackRock Boosts U.S. Equity Stance, Cites Contained Iran Conflict and Strong Earnings Outlook

Asset manager raises U.S. rating to overweight as earnings forecasts firm and signs point to limited wider economic damage

By Leila Farooq
BlackRock Boosts U.S. Equity Stance, Cites Contained Iran Conflict and Strong Earnings Outlook

BlackRock raised its rating on U.S. equities from neutral to overweight in a weekly market note, citing expectations that the Iran conflict's macro impact will be limited and that corporate profit forecasts for the U.S. and emerging markets have moved higher. The firm, which manages $14 trillion, noted two conditions that prompted the shift: evidence of resumed flows through the Strait of Hormuz and clearer visibility that the conflict's broader economic effects are contained.

Key Points

  • BlackRock raised its U.S. equity rating to overweight from neutral, citing limited expected economic fallout from the Iran conflict and stronger earnings forecasts.
  • Corporate earnings expectations have increased for both the U.S. and emerging markets for 2026; FactSet projects a 12.6% rise in S&P 500 first-quarter profits, which could reach 19% if historical beat rates hold.
  • Technology earnings are forecast to grow about 45% this year, even as the sector has delivered only marginal gains, pushing its relative valuation against other sectors to the lowest since mid-2020; BlackRock favors thematic areas such as defense.

BlackRock has upgraded its outlook on U.S. stocks, moving its tactical rating to overweight from neutral, according to its most recent weekly market note. The asset manager, which oversees $14 trillion in client assets, said the decision reflects both a reassessment of geopolitical risk related to the Iran conflict and firmer expectations for corporate earnings.

Strategists at the firm said prospects for a lasting ceasefire have shifted their view on the conflict's economic consequences, leading them to conclude the effects are unlikely to be substantial after an initial period of heightened risk. BlackRock had earlier reduced its risk exposure in response to the outbreak of hostilities.

"We saw two signposts that would lead us to re-up risk after reducing it a few weeks ago. First, tangible evidence of actions that would reopen flows through the Strait of Hormuz. And second, visibility on the lingering macro impact being contained," the note said.

The firm highlighted that expectations for corporate earnings have risen for both the U.S. and emerging markets for 2026, even since the conflict began on Feb. 28. As earnings season begins, consensus estimates compiled by FactSet point to a 12.6% year-over-year increase in S&P 500 profits for the first quarter. FactSet added that if historical beat rates persist, that projected gain would lift to about 19%.

Technology profit growth is projected to be especially strong, with forecasts indicating a 45% increase this year. Despite that forecasted expansion, the information technology sector has generated only a marginal advance so far this year, a combination that BlackRock said has pushed its relative valuation versus the other 10 S&P sectors to the lowest level since mid-2020.

BlackRock's strategists wrote that they are increasing risk exposure in the U.S. and in emerging markets on the back of robust earnings expectations and limited accrued damage to global growth. They said they will be watching profit margins closely during the U.S. first-quarter earnings season and continue to favor thematic allocations such as defense.

At present, the U.S. and emerging markets are the only overweights in BlackRock's equity allocation.

Risks

  • The upgrade depends on evidence that flows through the Strait of Hormuz are reopening; if that evidence is absent or reversed, the assessment of limited impact could change - this primarily affects energy and global trade-sensitive sectors.
  • The shift assumes the conflict's lingering macro impact remains contained; a broader or prolonged economic disruption could undermine the overweight stance - a risk to global growth-sensitive markets.
  • Earnings outcomes are a key driver of the move; if corporate profits fail to meet current expectations or historical beat rates do not persist, market returns could be weaker than anticipated - this affects equity sectors broadly, including technology.

More from Economy

Ukraine central bank warns Middle East conflict will lift domestic inflation Apr 13, 2026 Investor Justin Sun Says Trump-Linked Crypto Firm Built Hidden Tool to Freeze WLFI Tokens Apr 13, 2026 FSB Chair Flags Risk of a 'Double or Triple Whammy' as Funding Costs Rise Apr 13, 2026 NY Fed Reports Smaller Unrealized Loss on Bond Portfolio in 2025 Apr 13, 2026 Banks Face Elevated Cyber Risk as Anthropic’s Mythos Shows Capacity to Automate Complex Exploits Apr 13, 2026