Earnings Revision
In “The Outlook for 2026 – A Year of Great Promise with Risks” (December 24, 2026) we estimated S&P 500 earnings of $315 for 2026 and $350 for 2027 while adding the caveat that “we believe our forecasts could prove too conservative.” Our forecasts seemed optimistic at the time, but with first quarter earnings season now more than 65% complete, it is obvious that we were indeed too conservative about earnings growth.
First quarter earnings results have been stellar. LSEG Data Analytics reported that 83% of reported earnings have exceeded consensus estimates and first quarter year-over-year earnings growth is expected to be nearly 28%. This is nearly 3.5 times the long-term average of 8.1% YOY and the steadfastness of solid and broad-based earnings growth continues to defy the naysayers worried about the negative impact of tariffs in 2025 and high gasoline prices in 2026. Energy prices are likely to lift inflation in coming months, but to Corporate America the offsets to this have been lower taxes on individuals which helps consumption, lower corporate taxes, productivity gains due to AI, and robust capital investment due to a tax law change that allows businesses to deduct the full cost of new investments in the year they are made.
As a result, we are increasing our 2026 estimate from $315 to $330 and our 2027 estimate from $350 to $382. These represent earnings growth rates of 27.5% and 9%, respectively, and are only slightly above the current LSEG IBES consensus estimates of $327.87 and $380.79, respectively. Our revisions also imply that while positive earnings surprises have boosted stocks consistently in recent quarters, these positive surprises will be more difficult to generate as the year advances. In short, the equity market has been driven and supported by excellent earnings growth, but in large part, that has been discounted in prices.
No Target Revision
With the S&P 500 closing at 7259.22, it means the equity market is currently trading at 22 times this year’s earnings and 19 times next year’s earnings. The Outlook for 2026 also stated that “The trailing PE multiple of the S&P 500 index has hovered around 26 times for most of the last twelve months and we do not expect this to change. And when we apply a 26 PE multiple to our earnings forecast of $315, we get an S&P 500 target of 8190, which represents a gain of 18%.”
In our view, our original 8190 target is still a good forecast for the S&P 500 but for different reasons. Earnings have been better than expected, but inflation has increased. History shows that higher inflation has been and should be a drag on PE multiples. Nevertheless, a blended earnings estimate (one-third of 2026 plus two-thirds of 2027 earnings) times the current multiple of 22 equals an S&P 500 target of 8170. In sum, the 8170-8190 range appears to be a justifiable target for this year.
Great Promise with Risks
Our theme of “great promise with risks” remains a good description for 2026. The conflict with Iran was not a risk that we anticipated this year, but we were concerned that the Supreme Court could rule against Trump’s tariff policy and have a negative impact on GDP. This has come to pass; however, it appears that there are several ways to implement tariffs, and the administration is finding a work-around. Hopefully this change will be successful, narrow the trade gap, and boost GDP. A strong economy is a must for several reasons, but none more important than it helps a country carry its huge deficit. The key ratio is the debt-to-GDP ratio and debt should not be growing faster than GDP to prevent a debt crisis. At the end of March, the 12-month sum of deficits to GDP was 5.2%, well above the administration’s 3% target, but also down from the frightening 7.2% seen in January 2024. See page 4.
A big concern has been the K-shaped economy and how this could impact consumption. Unfortunately, recent economic data is showing some consumer stress. GDP grew 2.0% (SAAR) in the first quarter of 2026, following a weak 0.5% pace in the fourth quarter due to a record-breaking 43-day government shutdown. See page 3. A major contributor to first quarter GDP was consumer spending, which added 1.1% to growth; however, the largest contributor was personal consumption of services, which added 1.11%, while consumption of goods was slightly negative. The Federal government added 0.6% to GDP, nonresidential investment added 1.4%, inventory accumulation added 0.4% and exports added 1.3%. Residential investment subtracted 0.3% and net exports decreased first quarter GDP by 1.3%. Net exports were the second worst drag on quarterly real GDP growth in four years. See page 4.
In nominal terms, gross domestic product rose 6% in the first quarter, driven largely by personal consumption which increased 5.5% YOY. Gross private domestic product rose a mere 1.6% YOY overall, but investment in equipment and software rose 13.7% and investment in intellectual property increased 10.7%. Nonresidential investment in structures fell 3.9% YOY and residential investment fell 2.9% YOY. It is clear from the data that capital investment has been helping the economy, but big consumer areas like housing and vehicle sales have been weak. Total vehicle sales, including light weight trucks, were 16.3 million units (SAAR), down 1.3% for the month of April and down 7.2% YOY. See page 5.
The ISM manufacturing index was unchanged in April, but six of ten components declined in the month and one of the “positive” components was prices paid to vendors. The ISM nonmanufacturing index fell 0.4 in April to 53.6, but four of its nine components rose in the month and one, prices paid, was unchanged. All in all, the ISM indices displayed a mixed economic picture for April. But note the combination of the two ISM employment indices was 94.4, up 2.1 in April, and while still weak, remains safely within the long-term neutral range. See page 6.
New home sales were better than expected in March, rising 7% for the month to 682,000 annualized units, representing a 3% YOY increase. Sales are still recovering from a sharp decline in January. The price of a new median home was $384,000, down 6% YOY. Housing starts were strong in March, increasing 10.8% YOY and single-family starts rose 8.9% YOY. But housing permits weakened and total permits were down 7.4% YOY and single-family permits were off 7.9% YOY. Rising inflation will make housing less affordable in coming months, and we expect the housing market to remain sluggish in the second quarter. See page 7.
Still Buying Dips Fundamentals remain solid for US equity markets and technical indicators are also supportive. The Russell 2000 index is the best performing index this year with a gain of 14.6%, followed by the Nasdaq Composite up 9%, the S&P 500 up 6%, and the DJIA up 2.6%. A market led by small-capitalization companies is a bullish characteristic. The NYSE cumulative advance/decline line made a record high on April 20, 2026, but is only 325 net advancing stocks away from a new record. This is positive.
Gail Dudack
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