Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

Markets

The AI boom will stay with the S&P 500, says one of most pessimistic Wall Street firms heading into 2023

Goldman Sachs is sticking to its bullish stock-market forecast for the year while Morgan Stanley has just reiterated its downbeat outlook. But not everyone is clinging to their positions at the halfway point.

Strategists at Societe Generale headed into the year with one of the more pessimistic S&P 500 targets on Wall Street, of 3,800, though actually that would have represented a flat performance. They have now bumped up their year-end S&P 500
SPX,
-0.51%
target to 4,300, which does mean the benchmark index would drop 2% by the time Santa arrives.

The team led by Manish Kabra say the “AI boom” stocks have added 500 points to the index, and those gains aren’t about to vanish.

The SocGen team say AI-driven surprises led to a 3% to 4% increase in S&P 500 earnings per share this year. And they note other positive, bottom-up signals. The breadth of earnings per share revisions is less negative than anticipated, and profit margins are starting to improve against the odds indicated by leading indicators.

There’s also a reshoring boom of non-residential construction.

That said the French bank still sees macroeconomic concerns, listing indicators such as the yield curve, lending standards, the new order components of the Institute for Supply Management’s indexes and its own measures of the U.S. consumer, profit growth and global economic surprises.

“As the profit-margin reversal, credit weakness and sharply rising recession risk will most likely be visible in [the first half of 2024], this should bring the S&P 500 back to 3,800,” SocGen warns.

They list two positive and negative risks. One is the AI boom feeds into the market like the TMT bubble of the 1990s, which would send the S&P 500 to around 5,500, with the market pricing the index at 25 times forward earnings as was seen after the rate cuts in 1998. The negative risk would be anything that leads oil
CL.1,
+1.88%
to move above $100 per barrel, which would trigger a second hump on U.S. consumer prices and force the Fed to get even tighter.

The market

After Tuesday’s downturn, futures
ES00,
-0.50%

NQ00,
-1.30%
traded lower. In fact most assets were fairly steady, apart from bitcoin
BTCUSD,
+6.11%
which was trading around $29,000 amid recent institutional activity in the crypto space.

For more market updates plus actionable trade ideas for stocks, options and crypto, subscribe to MarketDiem by Investor’s Business Daily.

The buzz

Ahead of his House Financial Services Committee appearance at 10 a.m. Eastern, Fed Chair Jerome Powell told lawmakers to expect higher interest rates.

Chicago Fed President Austan Goolsbee separately will take part in a moderated discussion.

In the U.K., inflation rose at a hotter-than-forecast 8.7% year-over-year rate, raising the possibility of a half-point Bank of England rate hike on Thursday.

FedEx shares
FDX,
-3.14%
are due to see pressure as the company forecast earnings below Wall Street estimates.

A Congresswoman lit up Twitter by posting her nearly $800 receipt at Costco.

Best of the web

Justice Alito didn’t disclose a luxury fishing trip with a hedge-fund titan who won a landmark Supreme Court case.

The Pentagon said it overestimated the amount of funding for Ukraine by $6.2 billion.

JPMorgan Chase says the U.S. Virgin Islands gave Jeffrey Epstein more than $300 million in tax incentives and waived sex-offender monitoring requirements.

Top tickers

Here are most active stock-market ticker symbols on MarketWatch.

Ticker

Security name

TSLA,
-5.56%
Tesla

GME,
-0.28%
GameStop

NVDA,
-2.27%
Nvidia

SPCE,
-7.50%
Virgin Galactic

NIO,
-3.69%
Nio

MULN,
+15.58%
Mullen Automotive

MANU,
+1.24%
Manchester United

AMC,
-1.20%
AMC Entertainment

AAPL,
-0.53%
Apple

NKLA,
+8.33%
Nikola

The chart

China has quietly become an auto exporting heavyweight, notes Brad Setser, senior fellow at the Council on Foreign Relations and a former Treasury Department economist. He said it’s on track to become a net exporter of autos and auto parts to the European Union by the end of the year.

Random reads

Silver for jewelry is being extracted from old X-ray film.

The story of the world’s fastest accountant, who now sports Europe’s best time in the 100 meters this year.

This baby seal likes to surf.

Need to Know starts early and is updated until the opening bell, but sign up here to get it delivered once to your email box. The emailed version will be sent out at about 7:30 a.m. Eastern.

Listen to the Best New Ideas in Money podcast with MarketWatch reporter Charles Passy and economist Stephanie Kelton.

Read the full article here

Click to comment

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

Videos

Watch full video on YouTube

Videos

Watch full video on YouTube

News

This article was written by Follow The Value Portfolio specializes in building retirement portfolios and utilizes a fact-based research strategy to identify investments. This...

Videos

Watch full video on YouTube