JPMorgan says S&P 500 could clear 8,000 by 2026 if the Fed cuts more than markets expect
A deeper Federal Reserve easing cycle could propel the S&P 500 toward 8,000 by 2026, JPMorgan argues, with AI-led earnings growth and lower rates offsetting valuation concerns and sustaining risk appetite.
Key Points
- JPMorgan’s base case targets roughly 7,500 on the S&P 500 by 2026, with an upside scenario above 8,000 if the Fed delivers more cuts than currently priced.
- The bank projects U.S. earnings growth of 13–15% over the next two years, powered by resilient demand and persistent AI-related capital expenditure.
- Elevated valuations are seen as defensible amid accelerating investment, rising buybacks/dividends and potential policy tailwinds.
- Risks include policy missteps, AI-driven economic imbalances and more volatile sentiment as the cycle matures.
- Deutsche Bank has also floated an 8,000 end-2026 scenario, underscoring growing Street debate around the market’s AI premium and the Fed path.
The call: more cuts, more upside
JPMorgan’s new Global Equity Outlook lays out a constructive path for U.S. stocks, hinging on a more accommodative Fed than markets currently discount. In that scenario, lower policy rates compress discount rates, support multiples and extend the AI investment cycle—pushing the S&P 500 beyond 8,000 by 2026. The bank’s base case centers on ~7,500 as earnings and easing macro pressures do the heavy lifting without an aggressive policy pivot.
Earnings and AI remain the growth engine
The firm anticipates U.S. corporate profits to expand 13–15% over the next two years, citing:
- AI-led capex boosting productivity and monetization across semis, cloud, software and industrial automation.
- Shareholder returns via buybacks/dividends supporting per-share earnings and sentiment.
- Easing macro headwinds as financial conditions loosen, improving margins and financing costs.
While valuations are rich by historical standards, JPMorgan sees the combination of growth plus a lower-rate backdrop as sufficient to sustain the premium—provided inflation remains contained.
What it means for FX, rates and sectors
If the Fed cuts more deeply:
- Rates: Treasury yields would likely grind lower, flattening risk premia and supporting longer-duration equities, especially megacap tech and AI-levered cyclicals.
- FX: A softer U.S. dollar would typically follow, aiding high-beta FX and carry, while potentially relieving pressure on emerging markets. The yen and euro could benefit on narrowing rate differentials.
- Equities: Duration-sensitive growth shares could extend leadership, though a softer dollar also favors global cyclicals, commodities-adjacent equities and parts of small/mid-cap with rate sensitivity.
Risks and what to watch
JPMorgan flags that rapid AI diffusion could create uneven sectoral outcomes and amplify market swings. The path is highly sensitive to inflation and labor dynamics: a re-acceleration in price pressures or sticky services inflation could cap the Fed’s ability to ease, re-lifting yields and the dollar. Fiscal uncertainty, geopolitics and liquidity conditions into year-end could also inject volatility.
Street context
JPMorgan’s upside aligns with a broader debate about how far the AI boom and easier policy can stretch this cycle. Deutsche Bank has similarly floated an 8,000 S&P 500 level by end-2026. The key wedge remains policy expectations: the more the Fed’s trajectory tilts dovish, the more plausible the AI-driven multiple and earnings expansion thesis becomes, BPayNews notes.
FAQ
What would push the S&P 500 to 8,000 by 2026?
A deeper-than-priced Fed cutting cycle, combined with double‑digit earnings growth from AI-related investment, could extend multiples and lift the index above 8,000, according to JPMorgan.
What is JPMorgan’s base case for the S&P 500?
Roughly 7,500 by 2026, assuming steady earnings momentum, some policy easing and moderating macro pressures without an aggressive Fed pivot.
How fast does JPMorgan expect earnings to grow?
The bank projects U.S. earnings growth of 13–15% over the next two years, led by AI capex, productivity gains and robust shareholder returns.
How might deeper Fed cuts affect the U.S. dollar?
Lower U.S. yields would typically pressure the dollar, narrowing rate differentials and supporting currencies like the euro and yen, while improving risk appetite for high-beta FX.
Which sectors stand to benefit most?
Duration-sensitive growth areas—semiconductors, cloud infrastructure, software and select industrial automation—along with beneficiaries of a softer dollar such as global cyclicals.
What are the main risks to the bullish scenario?
Sticky inflation limiting Fed easing, AI-driven economic imbalances, policy or geopolitical shocks and tighter liquidity could all curb multiples and raise volatility.
How does this compare with other Wall Street forecasts?
Deutsche Bank has also discussed an S&P 500 near 8,000 by end-2026. The dispersion largely reflects differing assumptions about the Fed’s rate path, inflation durability and the pace of AI monetization.





