In the lead-up to Monday's Nasdaq plunge and Tuesday's global market decline, Stephen Parker, Co-Head of Global Investment Strategy at JPMorgan Private Bank, stated that this year's stock market gains have been entirely driven by earnings growth, with even the most optimistic expectations being consistently exceeded. In an interview, Parker outlined a year-end baseline target of 7800 for the S&P 500. He also noted that if current valuation multiples remain stable and earnings momentum continues, an optimistic target of 8900 is "not out of reach."
The key to achieving these higher targets lies in broad-based earnings strength across all sectors. Parker pointed out that among the 11 sectors of the S&P 500, eight are projected to deliver double-digit earnings growth. "What would really make us more nervous," he said, "is if suddenly the market was being supported not by fundamentals, but by optimism, euphoria, and animal spirits quietly building." He emphasized that if valuation multiples were to become a larger part of the growth story than corporate earnings, it would raise concerns.
Emerging markets are JPMorgan's top investment pick for this year. Parker highlighted that Asia—specifically South Korea and Taiwan, China—is benefiting from the current chip demand boom. Despite a 30% rise in emerging markets this year, earnings growth in these regions is forecast to reach 50%. "Yes, we are starting to see some bottlenecks now, but that's a sign of strong demand," Parker explained.
Despite improved earnings expectations, the financial sector has notably underperformed. Parker cited concerns regarding private credit, energy prices affecting consumer loan demand, and potential disruption from AI in industries like insurance. However, he views the sector as an opportunity, noting that loan demand remains robust.
Regarding consumer health, Parker acknowledged that the positive tailwind from large tax refunds is beginning to fade, and labor market conditions will be the key area to watch closely.
On the Federal Reserve, Parker expects the central bank to hold rates steady as officials assess whether falling energy prices will ease inflationary pressures. "We think the market can withstand a couple of rate hikes here," he stated, noting that the dramatic shift in market expectations—from three cuts to two hikes—has not derailed the core narrative of corporate earnings growth.
He observed that a more significant shift is the Fed's move toward less transparency—such as shorter statements and reduced focus on the dot plot. He anticipates this will increase market volatility around policy decisions but will not end the bull market.
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