S&P 500 could hit 8,000 HSBC strategists say
HSBC raised its year-end 2026 S&P 500 target to 7,650 from 7,500, lifting EPS growth forecasts by 8% on stronger Q1 results, while warning the rally remains dangerously narrow.
Summary:
- HSBC Global Investment Research raised its year-end 2026 S&P 500 target to 7,650 from 7,500 on 11 May
- The revision was accompanied by an 8% upgrade to 2026 index EPS estimates, with HSBC now projecting earnings per share growth of around 20%, or $325
- Magnificent Seven megacap technology stocks were cited as the primary driver of gains, per HSBC analyst Nicole Inui
- HSBC outlined four conditions under which the index could exceed 8,000: a tech re-rating adding 300 to 700 points, laggard sector recovery adding around 130 points, AI-driven margin gains contributing 200 points, and a favourable rates-and-growth backdrop adding 300 points
- The bank warned that most S&P 500 constituents remain below their 52-week highs despite the index sitting at record levels, flagging concentration risk
- Downside risks identified include persistently high oil prices, a potential slowdown in tech earnings against heavy capital expenditure, and a hawkish Federal Reserve pivot if inflation accelerates
HSBC Global Investment Research has raised its year-end 2026 target for the S&P 500 to 7,650, up from a prior forecast of 7,500, citing stronger-than-expected corporate earnings and an 8% upgrade to its index earnings per share estimates. The bank now projects EPS growth of around 20% for 2026, equivalent to $325 per share, with Magnificent Seven megacap technology firms continuing to account for a disproportionate share of those gains.
The revision follows what HSBC characterised as a solid first-quarter earnings season, which helped the S&P 500 recover to record highs. Analyst Nicole Inui, writing in the bank’s research note, acknowledged that the recent advance has been driven by a relatively small group of names, with the majority of index constituents still trading below their 52-week highs. That divergence between headline performance and underlying breadth is, in HSBC’s view, both a vulnerability and a source of potential upside.
If participation broadens and more sectors join the rally, the bank believes the index could move beyond its new base target. HSBC mapped out four scenarios under which the S&P 500 could surpass 8,000. A re-rating of technology valuations, potentially catalysed by high-profile AI-sector IPOs, could contribute between 300 and 700 points. A recovery in underperforming sectors, as geopolitical and trade uncertainties ease, could add around 130 points. Wider adoption of artificial intelligence driving margin improvements across industries could contribute a further 200 points. Finally, a backdrop of falling long-term interest rates alongside resilient economic growth could add 300 points.
The bank was careful to balance its optimism with a set of clearly stated risks. Sustained elevated oil prices were flagged as a potential drag on economic growth and corporate margins. A slowdown in technology sector earnings, at a time when capital expenditure demands remain high, was identified as a specific concern. HSBC also warned that a shift toward a more hawkish Federal Reserve stance, if inflation were to re-accelerate, could undermine the rate-sensitive conditions that have supported equity valuations. Sentiment, the bank noted, is on shakier ground than earnings alone would suggest.
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HSBC’s upward revision adds institutional weight to a market already trading at record highs, which may reinforce near-term bullish sentiment and support further inflows into large-cap technology names. However, the bank’s own caution about rally breadth is the more telling signal for traders: an index carried by a handful of AI-linked megacaps is more vulnerable to sharp reversals if that leadership group disappoints. The flagging of elevated oil prices as a downside risk is directly relevant to energy markets, suggesting HSBC sees sustained fuel costs as a macro drag capable of slowing corporate earnings growth more broadly and complicating the Federal Reserve’s rate path.
This article was written by Eamonn Sheridan at investinglive.com.