Speed trap? S&P 500 races past year-end targets
It’s just June, but the stock market’s gains have exceeded the expectations many top Wall Street strategists had for the entire year. And that raises the risk the market may get tripped up by the Wall Street version of a speed trap.
The Standard & Poor’s 500-stock index’s June 9 record close of 1951.27 eclipses the year-end price targets of 10 stock strategists, or half of the 20 prognosticators polled by Bloomberg. Monday’s record high is 100 points, or more than 5%, above the lowest target of 1850 put forth at the start of the year by Wells Fargo’s Gina Martin Adams, Deutsche Bank’s David Bianco and Barry Bannister of Stifel Nicolaus.
The bearish takeaway is that the stock market has hit its peak for the year and might even be at risk of giving up the gains it has already earned.
For those in the glass-half-full camp, there are still 10 top strategists that have targets that exceed the market’s recent peak. The most bullish call, for example, comes courtesy of Tony Dwyer of Canaccord. His target of 2185 for the S&P 500 equates to an additional gain of 12% for the benchmark index.
The average year-end price target is 1969, roughly 20 points, or 1%, above the S&P 500′s record close.
The $64,000 question is whether the mega-bulls or market skeptics have it right.
Here are the 2014-year-end targets of 20 Wall Street firms.
Firm 2014 Close
Canaccord 2185 HIGH
Weeden 2100
RBC 2075
Credit Suisse 2020
Morgan Stanley 2014
Oppenheimer 2014
Bank of America 2000
Ameriprise 1982
BTIG 1980
Citigroup 1975
AVERAGE 1969
Jefferies 1950
Scotiabank 1950
UBS 1950
Nomura 1925
Bank of Montreal 1900
Goldman Sachs 1900
HSBC 1900
Deutsche Bank 1850 LOW
Stifel Nicolaus 1850 LOW
Wells Fargo 1850 LOW
Source: Bloomberg