Citigroup has raised its baseline year-end 2026 target for the S&P 500 to 8,100 points from 7,700, pointing to stronger corporate earnings and faster capital spending tied to AI. The bank kept its bullish scenario unchanged at 8,300, signaling that while fundamentals remain solid, further upside may be limited as valuations climb.
The new baseline implies earnings per share of 350 dollars and a trailing price-to-earnings ratio of 23.1, up from 320 dollars at the start of the year. Citigroupâs downside scenario remains at 6,800 points, based on 340 dollars in earnings and a multiple of 20.0. The firm said much of the positive earnings outlook is already reflected in current pricing.
Earnings strength supports outlook
Corporate earnings have continued to exceed expectations. In the first quarter of 2026, S&P 500 companies reported 81.0 dollars per share, 13.1 percent above forecasts. Gains were led by the âMag 8â technology firms, whose profit estimates were revised higher by 34.5 percent.
Growth is now broadening beyond large technology companies. Total S&P 500 earnings are expected to rise 24.2 percent this year, with growth sectors expanding 41.8 percent, cyclical industries 17.6 percent, and defensive sectors 5.8 percent. The Mag 8 are projected to deliver 38 percent growth, while the rest of the index is expected to post about 19 percent.
Market breadth widens as smaller companies outperform
So far this year, performance has broadened across the market. While the Mag 8 have declined 3.1 percent, the other 492 companies in the index have gained 14.9 percent overall. Smaller firms have outpaced the broader benchmark, with the S&P 600 rising 22.3 percent and the S&P 400 up 16.3 percent.
Valuations for smaller companies remain relatively Ù ÙŰźÙ۶ compared with historical norms. The forward P/E for the S&P 600 Value Index is 13.8, below its 20-year median of 17.2, alongside projected earnings growth of 25 percent in 2026. Wider participation has improved market resilience, though it could also increase downside exposure if conditions weaken.
AI spending accelerates while buybacks slow
AI-related investment continues to drive corporate spending higher. Capital expenditures among non-financial S&P 500 companies are expected to reach around 1.65 trillion dollars in 2026, a 37 percent increase from the prior year, with further growth projected in 2027.
The Mag 8 are leading this surge, with capital spending expected to jump 82 percent, focused on data centers, semiconductors, cloud infrastructure, and AI development. At the same time, share buybacks have provided support, totaling about 990 billion dollars over the past year, though their pace has slowed as companies prioritize long-term investment.
Sentiment signals growing caution
Market sentiment has entered elevated territory. Citigroupâs Levkovich Panic/Euphoria Index recently reached 1.01, well above levels typically associated with euphoria. Historically, such readings have been followed by a median 12-month return of negative 8.6 percent, with limited odds of gains.
Positioning also appears stretched. Foreign buying of U.S. equities is near a 30-year high relative to market size, while mutual funds and ETFs have recorded their strongest inflows in a decade, leaving less room to absorb negative surprises.
Macro data adds uncertainty
Recent economic data presents mixed signals. Inflation has accelerated, with the Consumer Price Index rising 4.2 percent annually, the highest in three years, potentially limiting central bank flexibility and putting pressure on valuations.
At the same time, the labor market remains strong, adding 172,000 jobs in the latest report. While this supports spending and corporate revenue, it may also reinforce inflation concerns and lead to tighter financial conditions.
Consumer resilience continues to underpin growth. Retail sales rose 0.9 percent in May, exceeding expectations and reinforcing the strength of household demand.
Shifting market dynamics emerge
Market leadership appears to be rotating. The equal-weight S&P 500 has recently outperformed the traditional market-cap-weighted index, suggesting gains are spreading across a wider range of companies rather than being concentrated in large technology names.
Despite elevated sentiment, volatility remains relatively subdued. The Cboe Volatility Index has hovered around 18.41, even as survey data shows bullish sentiment among traders climbing above historical averages.
Outlook points to tighter risk-reward balance
Citigroupâs decision to raise its baseline target while leaving its bull case unchanged reflects a more balanced outlook. Strong earnings and economic resilience continue to support current levels, but high valuations, elevated sentiment, and uncertainty around AI-driven returns may limit further gains in the second half of 2026.
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