The prediction war between stock market bulls and bears is reaching a feverish pitch. Here's where Jeremy Siegel, Michael Burry and 5 others see US equities heading.
A Bull and Bear facing off
There is a great divide in outlooks for the US stock market between bulls and bears.Fernando Trabanco Fotografía/Getty, Daniel Hernanz Ramos/Getty, Tyler Le/Insider
  • There's a glaring divide in outlooks for US stocks right now between market bulls and bears.

  • One side is pounding the alarm about a crash, while the other believes the current rally can continue.

  • Here's where top investors and economists like Jeremy Siegel and Michael Burry see US stocks headed.

There's a huge debate over where US stocks are headed going on right now — and it's a tug-of-war between the hopeful and the glum.

Bulls like Jeremy Siegel reckon the stock market rally of 2023 still has room to run, while bearish investors like "The Big Short" legend Michael Burry are warning of a crash ahead.

Investors who expect stocks to deliver attractive returns are betting that the recent cooling in US inflation will spur the Federal Reserve into cutting interest rates this year. Stocks tend to rise when rates fall, because it's less expensive for companies to borrow cash.

On the other side are those who expect a rude awakening for people with such rosy views of the outlook for stocks. They warn that further central bank tightening, recession risks and weak earnings growth could lead to a plunge.

Here's what seven market experts forecast for US stocks in a faceoff between bulls and bears.

Stock market bulls

Jeremy Siegel, Wharton professor

The retired Wharton professor and author of "Stocks for the Long Run" stands by his call that stocks will keep rising this year as inflation moderates. That could prompt the Fed to end its interest-rate hikes, or even start cutting them, which would boost equities.

Siegel feels confident in his forecast because investors and analysts have almost unanimously predicted further downside for stocks this year. "When everyone says that, you know they're wrong," he said.

He's suggested the S&P 500 could rise 20% in the first six months of 2023, and end the year with a 15-20% gain.

Tom Lee, head of research at Fundstrat

Lee, one of the biggest bulls on Wall Street, has predicted stocks could hit record highs by the end of the year. He thinks investors have already priced in a lot of bad news, especially weak earnings growth.

"There are those who say earnings are the next 'shoe to drop', but EPS estimates [have] been falling for many months already," Lee explained, referring to earnings per share. "So what arguably matters more is how are stocks reacting to EPS results."

"Investors are punishing misses to a far less extent," he said. "Again, highlighting a lot of the bad news of 2023 EPS is getting priced in. This doesn't mean EPS falling is good, but this does show lots are priced in."

The Fundstrat Global Advisors analyst expects the S&P 500 to rise another 18% this year to 4,800.