Wells Fargo has increased its 2026 year-end projection for the S&P 500 to 7,950, marking a significant upgrade from the firm’s earlier forecast of 7,300. This revised target suggests approximately 5.2% potential gains from the index’s latest closing level of 7,554.29.
E-Mini S&P 500 Jun 26 (ES=F)
The financial institution attributed the upgrade to improved corporate profit expectations, diminishing geopolitical threats, and a recent market correction that recalibrated investor attitudes.
The bank has revised its S&P 500 earnings per share forecast for 2026 upward to $340, compared to its previous projection of $315. Additionally, Wells Fargo lifted its 2027 EPS estimate to $390 from $365.
In a parallel move, Wells Fargo Investment Institute adjusted its own year-end S&P 500 target band to 7,800–8,000, up from 7,400–7,600. The institute also established a 2027 target range of 8,600–8,800.
The S&P 500 has climbed 10.3% year-to-date, propelled primarily by artificial intelligence enthusiasm and developments surrounding the Iran situation.
In a discussion with CNBC, chief equity strategist Ohsung Kwon explained that a recent modest market decline helped restore investor sentiment to more neutral territory. According to Kwon, this adjustment provides space for additional market appreciation.
The institution highlighted declining crude oil prices, currently hovering near $70 per barrel, as a factor likely to contain inflationary pressures in the coming months.
Kwon observed that recent Federal Reserve communications were “more balanced than market participants interpreted,” dismissing worries about the central bank’s monetary policy direction.
Wells Fargo identified inflation as the primary outstanding risk to equities, though only if the Fed responds with aggressive measures. The bank suggested that a “run it hot” approach would actually support stock prices.
Reduced oil prices and falling bond yields could provide tailwinds for sectors outside technology. Nevertheless, Kwon recognized that the Fed’s somewhat hawkish posture creates challenges for broader market diversification.
Notwithstanding the wider macroeconomic conversation, Wells Fargo maintained its emphasis on the technology sector. Kwon expressed confidence that the AI bull market has substantial runway ahead.
He referenced substantial AI infrastructure spending from leading technology firms, including Alphabet and Meta, as a positive catalyst for what he terms “CapEx takers” — semiconductor manufacturers and AI infrastructure providers.
Throughout recent market turbulence, semiconductor and AI infrastructure equities advanced while other sectors retreated, a dynamic Wells Fargo interprets as encouraging.
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