Most analyst year-end S&P 500 targets range from 4200 to 5600 for equities; and 3.00% to 4.75% for 10-year yields. My guess is we will land somewhere in between these zones. On the whole, it’s fair to suggest Wall Street feels ‘comfortable’ with holding equities. Consensus year end targets average 5400 – which tells me most don’t expect stocks to do much between now and year’s end. More important – they don’t expect stocks to lose any ground. This post expands what I think is the single most important variable (and risk) with these forecasts: the relative health of the US consumer and their ability to continue spending.
Is Momentum Waning? More on Why I’m Bullish Bonds into 2025
As part yesterday’s missive – I talked to why I think bond yields are too high. For example, I offered a chart showing the declining trend in nominal GDP growth vs what we see with the US 10-year yield. Economic growth is clearly slowing and yet yields are going the opposite way. Why? Therefore, investors should ask themselves what is the catalyst which will take us back to a 3.0% ‘growth’ mode (i.e. what we saw over Q3 and Q4 of 2023)? For example, is it the consumer? They make up ~70% of GDP with consumption – however they are mostly tapped out (as we have heard in the latest earnings reports). What will it be?
For Now… Bad News is Still Good News
Never confuse the stock market for the economy. They are two very different things. And whilst there are times when the two will trade in unison – there are also plenty of occasions when they diverge. Now is possibly the latter. For example, this week we had a plethora of ‘less than positive’ economic news. But it didn’t stop the market surging back to near record highs. Why? Every bit of bad (or soft) economic news is a step closer for the Fed to lower rates.
Rate Cuts and Small Business Optimism Fades
Make that three in a row. Jan, Feb and Mar CPI all exceeded expectations – showing how stubborn inflation can be. And whilst the Fed focuses more on Core PCE (due at the end of the month) – this remains a concern. Here’s the thing: non-core inflation continues to hurt real America. Take small business – their confidence is now at 2012 lows. Their primary concern: inflation and higher input costs.
For a full list of posts from 2017…