First Time Since 1999, Wall Street Forecasts Negative Returns for Upcoming Year

 | Dec 07, 2022 09:30

  • Professional strategists have issued their 2023 S&P 500 year-end targets, and the consensus is dour
  • With the SPX trading near 18-time next year’s EPS forecast, it is hard to call U.S. large caps a bargain
  • Bonds, while positively correlated with stocks, could still help weather equity volatility ahead
  • It’s that time of year on Wall Street. All of the sell-side macro outlooks are arriving in our inboxes. Various sector-weight recommendations and year-end S&P 500 price targets are worth their weight in coal (in my cynical opinion). While I find sell-side research very valuable for charts and identifying important risks, my guess is as good as theirs in terms of where markets will venture in the coming months.

    What’s unusual about this go-around, though, is that for the first time since at least 1999, the average strategist’s S&P 500 forecast for the end of the upcoming year is negative. We usually don’t see that much pessimism on the street. The obvious response is to figure out why the smartest folks in the industry see lower prices ahead and not the standard fare annual returns of 8% to 10%.

    h2 A Gloomy Crowd Calling for Lower Stocks in 2023