Stifel has raised its year-end target for the S&P 500 to approximately 7,800, a move the firm says is grounded in continued earnings expansion even as valuation multiples are likely to shrink. The firms updated forecast reflects a view that robust profit growth will offset multiple compression.
Analyst Thomas Carroll detailed the change in a research note, saying the bank is lifting its target by roughly 4% from current levels. Stifels outlook is supported by a projection for trailing twelve-month S&P 500 earnings per share of about $337, which the firm says represents roughly 26% growth.
Stifel attributes the earnings momentum to a "running hot" economy combined with strong operating leverage that is expanding corporate profits. At the same time, the bank acknowledges that current AI-related market activity bears resemblance to the late-1990s hardware surge, but it is not changing its positioning as a result.
"We stay long AI-capex winners into the peak, with eyes wide open," Carroll wrote, signaling a continued preference for companies benefitting from elevated AI capital spending even as the bank anticipates price-to-earnings ratios will compress under a more hawkish Federal Reserve.
The firm also flagged that stock concentration is at levels not seen in four decades, and it sees peaking dispersion as a sign that investors may begin rotating away from mega-cap names toward equal-weight strategies. Stifel characterizes the current U.S. economic picture as a bifurcated "Tale of Two Economies," where robust AI fixed investment is outpacing consumers facing financial pressure.
With core inflation remaining well above 2%, Stifel expects the Federal Reserve to pause rate increases rather than deliver additional hikes. Against that policy backdrop, the banks sector playbook tilts toward investment cyclicals - including energy, industrials, materials, and select semiconductors and hardware - while staying underweight consumer-facing sectors.
To manage risk, Stifel says it is hedging with defensive value exposure and highlights healthcare as its preferred defensive sector pick.
Key points
- Stifel raises its year-end S&P 500 target to roughly 7,800, a roughly 4% increase from current levels, on the back of projected EPS of about $337 (trailing 12 months), or 26% growth.
- The bank remains invested in AI-capex beneficiaries despite parallels to late-1990s hardware mania, expecting P/E compression under a more hawkish Fed.
- Sector emphasis shifts toward investment cyclicals - energy, industrials, materials, and select semiconductors and hardware - with healthcare as the preferred defensive play, and a continued underweight stance on consumer-facing names.
Risks and uncertainties
- Valuation risk - Stifel expects price-to-earnings multiples to compress, which could weigh on equity returns even if earnings rise; this affects broad equity market performance.
- Concentration risk - Stock concentration at 40-year highs raises the potential for volatility if mega-caps weaken, prompting rotation that could impact large-cap indices.
- Consumption pressure - The bank notes a split economy where stretched consumers lag behind booming AI fixed investment, creating uncertainty for consumer-facing sectors.