April 2026 global analyst survey results

Our analysts were generally constructive, aside from the war.

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By Lori Calvasina
Published | 2 min read

Key points

  • Analysts surveyed were generally constructive aside from the war.
  • Survey results reiterate the idea that the US is seen as a safety trade due to greater war resiliency.
  • Europe does not necessarily present as a better alternative despite the potential for the US to lag if and when war fog clears.
  • We review the most interesting sector tidbits from the survey.

The big things you need to know: First, our analysts were generally constructive aside from the war. Second, our survey results reiterate the idea that the US is seen as a safety trade due to greater war resiliency, and that Europe does not necessarily present as a better alternative despite the potential for the US to lag if and when war fog clears. Third, we review the most interesting sector tidbits from the survey.

Takeaway #1: Our analysts were generally constructive aside from the war.

Looking across all sectors and regions, our analysts are constructive on performance going forward if the Iran war continues to de-escalate, and also have constructive views on valuations, demand and the domestic policy backdrop. But they are pessimistic on performance in a prolonged war scenario and generally see negative impacts from the conflict.

We think the survey does a good job of illustrating the predicament that the equity market finds itself in today. Putting aside the war, the backdrop for equities has seemed solid. But ongoing concerns about the war’s duration, along with the damage that has already been incurred and the impacts that have not yet been felt continue to weigh on investor sentiment and have created fog in the outlook.

"We think the survey does a good job of illustrating the predicament that the equity market finds itself in today."

- Lori Calvasina, Head of U.S. Equity Strategy, RBC Capital Markets

Takeaway #2: Our survey results reiterate the idea (from a bottom-up perspective) that the US is seen as a safety trade due to greater war resiliency, and that Europe does not necessarily present as a better alternative despite the potential for the US to lag if and when war fog clears.

When we summarize the results by RBC coverage region, we find that performance outlooks tilt constructive across all regions in an Iran de-escalation scenario, with the most positive tilt in Australia and the least constructive tilt for the US.

In a prolonged Iran war scenario, however, performance outlooks tilted negative for all regions – least negative in the US and Australia and most negative in Europe.

Valuation views have a positive tilt in all geographies ex Europe where they are closer to neutral. Demand assessments have positive tilts across geographies ex Europe, with the most constructive tilt for Australia.

Effects from the Iran war are seen as a challenge for all of our coverage regions, most notably Europe and Australia, but in the US to the least extent.

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Our expert

Lori Calvasina
Lori Calvasina
Head of U.S. Equity Strategy, RBC Capital Markets

 

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