Here are the big stories that will drive the stock market in 2020

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As trading kicks off in 2020, most major Wall Street firms have delivered their early expectations for where equities are headed in the new year.

So far, most have been optimistic. Twenty of 23 financial institutions’ predictions reviewed by Yahoo Finance suggested the S&P 500 would end at least marginally higher in 2020, after closing out 2019 nearly 29% higher on the year at 3,230.78.

Here’s a look at some of the major themes underpinning Wall Street’s expectations for equity trading this year.

Trade war, Brexit risks shrink

Two events in December nearly simultaneously lowered the fear gauge on some of the biggest overhangs for stocks last year.

First, the Trump administration and China each said they had reached and would sign a phase one trade agreement, with is now on track to be signed later this month. And second, U.K. Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s landslide election win provided some much-needed clarity on a path forward for Brexit.

While both events still carry a risk of taking a turn for the worse, strategists have by and large factored in more positive sentiment surrounding these headline-dominating factors in making their 2020 predictions.

“Global business sentiment should start to heal and help normalize investment activity including inventory restocking as fears related to US/China trade, Brexit, and other one-off shocks to large economies fade (e.g. Italy, India, etc.),” JPMorgan strategist Dubravko Lakos-Bujas wrote in a Dec. 9 note. “All of the above leads us to believe that the business cycle should begin to gain stronger traction by early 2020.”

Wall Street's 2020 price targets
Wall Street's 2020 price targets

And as risks surrounding both Brexit and the U.S.-China trade war abate, investors will be free to focus on “the traditional drivers of markets” and especially earnings growth, Jefferies strategist Sean Darby said in an early December note. S&P 500 earnings per share (EPS), in turn, has the back of a strengthening economic backdrop, with late-2019 data pointing to a resilient labor market, thumping consumer spending and firming housing market.

“Looking toward 2020, the outlook for growth and risk assets has improved. Global economic growth, though still stuck in low gear, has started to improve. Earnings growth is set to reaccelerate,” said Dennis DeBusschere, Evercore chief investment strategist.

2020 elections

But as 2019’s risks diminish, new concerns will take their place – and many strategists count the 2020 U.S. elections as one such area to watch.

An outcome that sees a Democratic candidate take the White House could pose a risk to some sectors in the event that new sweeping policies replace those of the current administration, some analysts said.