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TACO trade grips retail investors as Trump shocks move markets

by May 21, 2026
written by May 21, 2026

Retail traders are increasingly using White House headlines as a trading signal, turning policy shocks, reversals and geopolitical tension into a fast-moving playbook across stocks, bonds and commodities.

The approach has gained momentum during Donald Trump’s second term as US president, with acronyms such as TACO, FAFO and FOMO being used by traders to frame short-term moves in markets.

The result has been sharper swings in oil, gold and long-dated Treasuries as investors react to policy signals, conflict headlines and signs of possible de-escalation.

Retail traders are trying to capitalise on abrupt shifts in sentiment.

Oil prices have surged this year amid concern over the Iran conflict and the Strait of Hormuz, while gold has seen sharp reversals after earlier safe-haven buying.

Long-dated Treasuries have also become a pressure point for markets and policymakers as higher yields weigh on asset prices.

TACO trade gains traction

One of the most prominent acronyms is TACO, short for “Trump always chickens out”.

Traders use the phrase to describe a strategy of buying market dips on the assumption that the White House will eventually step back from its most disruptive policies.

The term gained attention after the tariff-induced market shock in April 2025, when Trump paused or reversed parts of his tariff push to reopen talks with major trading partners.

Similar patterns have since been cited around US policy towards Venezuela and Iran, where markets have repeatedly priced in escalation before reassessing the likelihood of a more gradual approach.

For retail traders, the TACO trade represents a bet that the initial shock from a policy announcement will fade as political and market pressure builds.

That has encouraged dip-buying in risk assets when investors believe the administration may moderate its stance.

FAFO and FOMO shape positioning

FAFO, short for “f*** around, find out”, has also become part of the trading vocabulary.

In markets, the phrase is being used to describe the initial shock from a negative event, followed by a repositioning once traders judge that the political or economic cost of escalation has become too high.

That pattern has been visible in Treasuries, where long-dated yields have jumped during periods of turbulence before partially retracing as tensions eased.

However, renewed selling in long maturities has kept pressure on investors worried about prolonged disruption and inflation risks.

FOMO, or fear of missing out, has added another layer to the volatility.

Safe-haven demand drove strong buying in gold during the second half of 2025 as investors prepared for trade, geopolitical and economic shocks.

But as some concerns eased in early 2026, gold reversed sharply while traders shifted attention to oil and other commodities.

Oil swings add to market stress

Energy markets remain central to the retail trading narrative.

Oil has rallied sharply this year, with Brent crude touching elevated levels as traders priced in the risk of prolonged disruption in the Strait of Hormuz.

The conflict involving Iran has intensified speculation over energy supply, while large directional oil bets ahead of major policy announcements have drawn scrutiny.

Retail traders are now attempting to anticipate the next major swing in crude prices.

Another acronym, NACHO, or “Not A Chance Hormuz Opens”, has started to gain attention among traders.

The phrase reflects a bearish view on energy supply, based on the assumption that the Strait of Hormuz could remain closed or severely disrupted for an extended period.

Cross-asset whiplash

The speed of the moves has created what some traders describe as cross-asset whiplash.

Gold, equities, oil and Treasuries have all moved sharply as investors rotate between risk assets and havens.

When geopolitical risks rise, safe-haven assets such as gold tend to attract inflows.

But equities can also rally if traders believe the White House will intervene to limit the economic damage.

When risk assets stabilise, gold can then reverse quickly, forcing another round of positioning changes.

That cycle has complicated decision-making for global market participants.

Instead of trading on traditional bull or bear market signals alone, investors are increasingly interpreting political headlines, conflict risks and policy reversals as catalysts for short-term trades.

For now, retail traders appear willing to keep using White House signals as a guide.

But the strategy depends heavily on timing.

If policy shocks escalate rather than reverse, trades built around TACO, FAFO or FOMO could quickly turn from profitable bets into painful losses.

The post TACO trade grips retail investors as Trump shocks move markets appeared first on Invezz

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