Analyst overhauls S&P 500 target ahead of earnings season

In This Article:

Stocks have been on quite a roll over the past 12 months.

The S&P 500 has soared 27% amid hope for Federal Reserve interest-rate cuts and euphoria over artificial intelligence. That increase far exceeds the average annual gain of 9% since 1990, according to Moneychimp.

Some experts say it’s overdone, given the cloudy interest-rate picture.

Interest-rate futures indicate a 58% chance that the Fed will begin trimming rates in June. But some economists, such as Torsten Slok of Apollo Global Management, don’t think the central bank will cut rates at all this year.

Some experts also think that artificial intelligence is overhyped. They point out that it’s not yet clear exactly what financial impact AI will have on individual companies.

Stocks are on the rise, and Wells Fargo thinks they're headed higher.
Stocks are on the rise, and Wells Fargo thinks they're headed higher.

Valuations Historically High

Moreover, valuations are stretched historically. According to FactSet, the forward price-earnings ratio, or P/E, for the S&P 500 registered 20.5 as of April 5.

That tops the five-year average of 19.1 and the 10-year average of 17.7. And those were two periods when stock-price gains exceeded historical norms.

"There is nothing screaming from the rooftops that at 20 times you have to sell," Mark Hackett, chief of investment research at Nationwide Mutual Insurance, told Reuters. "It’s just you’d obviously rather buy at 15 times."

Related: $1 billion fund manager lauds several big tech stocks, including Nvidia

With optimism for technology stocks overdone, “I have a feeling we’re at the beginning of 2000,” when tech stocks crashed, Vincent Mortier, chief investment officer at Amundi, Europe’s biggest money manager, told Bloomberg.

Trouble in the commercial real estate market means “there’s also a little bit of 2007,” when the financial system began to wobble, he said.

TheStreet Pro's Doug Kass, a hedge fund manager whose career stretches back to the 1970s, recently listed several areas of danger for the market.

  • Geopolitical tension (the Mideast war),

  • Inflation fears,

  • The likelihood of higher interest rates for longer,

  • Interest rates have been climbing for several months,

  • Rising commodity prices, particularly gold and silver,

  • Market breadth has been deteriorating,

  • Energy's market leadership generally reflects a maturing bull market,

  • Investor sentiment is extremely bullish.

However, some experts remain hopeful, pointing out that analysts forecast a 3.2% year-over-year earnings increase for the S&P 500 in the first quarter, the third straight quarter of profit growth.

Major earnings releases start coming out on April 12.

Wells Fargo View of Stocks

Christopher Harvey, an equity analyst at Wells Fargo, is one of the bulls. He just pushed his year-end target for the S&P 500 to 5,535, up from 4,625 previously. The new level is the highest among Wall Street forecasters, he said.