Thursday, January 1, 2026

Outlook 2026: I have mixed feelings

Since last post the market had a moderate dip, rebounded back to the highs and for the past 5 days has been dripping  lower. This is the time of the year when I look back and look ahead. It's been yet another  crazy year. If you told me that the SPX would finish up 17% in 2025 after the liberation day meltdown I would have said you must be smoking the really good stuff. Even the most bullish of  bulls must have been surprised by this. We came into 2025 with complacent conditions as I had pointed out at the time and it made me cautious.  But the liberation day meltdown created the sentiment reset that paved the way forward to allow for the market to recover and soar to new highs the way it did. We went from Trump euphoria to Trump deep pessimism by mid April 2025. Sentiment has now however shifted back towards complacency...not euphoria, but complacency. Let's examine why. 

Wallstreet's average SPX year end targets for 2023 and 2024 were for gains of 5% and 2% respectively. It would  be far better to have this type of low expectation than what we have now given the average 2026 year end target of about 7600 which implies a 11% gain from here. That's not what you would call  wall of worry conditions especially coming off the back of 3 consecutive years of strong returns. Optimism is mainly centered around  rate cuts, AI adaption, and earnings growth beyond the Mag 7. Coming into 2025 we saw similar optimism from strategists with rosy year end price targets centered on bullish implications of Trump's tax cuts and de-regulation. By April the optimism towards Trump turned to deep pessimism thanks to Trump's threat of punitive tariffs and year end price targes were aggressively slashed. The lower expectations provided the necessary rebuilding of the wall of worry for the bull market to resume. It would appear that we need to see a similar rebuilding of the wall of the worry at some point in 2026 which implies a significant correction would be required. In 2025 it required a 20% decline to rebuild the wall.  That doesn't necessarily mean another 20% drop is required again this time.... it would be quite rare to see 2 consecutive years of 20% drop..., but if we don't get much of a correction in the coming months and the market instead just simply keeps going higher we would then see the market go from complacency to euphoria setting us up for an even bigger decline. Aside from rosy price targets, here's other evidence showing we have a complacent/overheated market.








Despite the bearish implications of the above charts which warrant at least a 5-10% correction, we have not yet seen the euphoric conditions that mark a major bull market peak . One classic sign of that would be a flood of IPO activity centered on AI. It seems unlikely that the so called bubble in AI is going to imminently burst without major flood of IPO activity which has not occurred as of yet.  Open AI is slated to IPO in 2nd half of 2026 at the earliest and so I'm looking at that event as to when the AI peak would be immanent. Obviously, there's no guarantee of that. Here's some other charts which suggest the bull market, albeit overextended, still has legs.








Bottom line for me is that current market conditions are not favorable in the short to intermediate term. Sure, markets can keep marching higher from here and possibly enter a blow-off phase which would be lucrative to capture , but when there's no wall of worry to climb it becomes a question of when, not if, the market hits a major air pocket and gives back all the gains and then some. It would appear to me that the market is in need of a reset.  Despite my concerns, it would appear that longer term the market still has a ways to go before hitting a secular peak. Just look at that last chart I posted which is consumer confidence. It would be inconceivable to see a secular bull market peak with confidence near record lows, benign IPO activity., and more favorable monetary conditions forthcoming. Let's see how it goes...