Take it as you will, but imo it probably at least warrants some caution. Per BBG:
At the big banks and the boutique investment shops, an optimistic consensus has taken hold: the US stock market will rally in 2026 for a fourth straight year, marking the longest winning streak in nearly two decades.
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But after three years when the equity market’s rip-roaring run made a mockery of any bearish calls, sell-side strategists are marching in lockstep optimism, with the average year-end S&P 500 forecast implying another 9% gain next year.
Not a single one of the 21 prognosticators surveyed by Bloomberg News is predicting a decline.< - >
“The pessimists have just been wrong for so long that people are kind of tired of that schtick,” said veteran market strategist and longtime bull Ed Yardeni. He expects the S&P to finish next year at 7,700 — up 11% from Friday’s close — yet even he finds the lack of dissent a little concerning.
“That’s where my counter instincts come out: Things have been going my way for so long that it is kind of worrying that everyone else seems to have become optimistic,” he said. “Pessimism is on the out right now.”
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Full article @
https://archive.ph/7it02
Comments
The bears had been beaten down and have now totally disappeared.
but it may not last the entire q1 2026.
https://www.mutualfundobserver.com/discuss/discussion/65194/jan-effect-2026#latest
i suspect today's broad dumping of precious metals is a play to capture 2026 equity gains.
Excellent thread. I have no real opinion, per se. I can see arguments that this can go on longer than is rational. And arguments that it is a reasonable proposition. And arguments that valuations matter. And/or that a "backfill scenario" can happen while tech simply remains rather static.
I would add that 9% return, with +/- a couple percent, may be equivalent to a good MS bond fund in 2026. As a possible counterpoint to a more risky approach.
I am prepared to go in several directions. A portfolio with lots of cash. A strong FI component. A value shift in 2025. Plenty of legacy tech. I feel pretty comfortable watching how things evolve.
My YTD return @ 62% equity is ~16.5%. Standing pat for now. Official retirement in 6 months and counting.
Given this track record, it’s hard to understand why people continue to read or post market predictions when history shows they are largely unreliable.
Warren Buffett famously said, “Be fearful when others are greedy, and greedy when others are fearful.” While catchy, this advice is often overstated. If you had sold at any point over the last 15 years because “others were greedy,” you would likely have underperformed the market, unless you had near-perfect timing.
Markets have been labeled “overvalued” for years (= greedy investors), yet they continued to deliver strong returns. Even Buffett himself has been accumulating cash over the past three years, during which the S&P 500 gained roughly 90%. For most investors, that cash-heavy positioning would have resulted in significant underperformance.