Here are Goldman Sachs’ 5 biggest 2026 market predictions
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Goldman Sachs unveiled its top predictions for markets in 2026.
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The bank expects the bull market in stocks to continue, but at a more modest pace than in recent years.
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A new chapter for the AI trade, robust capex, and an M&A boom are also on its radar.
After three straight years of stellar return, investors are searching for clues about what comes next.
According to Goldman Sachs, the answer is more gains, albeit at a more modest pace.
In a note to clients detailing the bank’s US equity outlook on Tuesday, strategists unveiled Goldman’s top market calls for this year. Another double-digit gain for the S&P 500, billions of fresh money being poured into AI, and a dealmaking spree are some of the things on its radar.
Optimism has been high on Wall Street for a while, with most forecasters still feeling bullish about the outlook for stocks even after a breakneck pace of gains since 2023. The benchmark index climbed 16% in 2025, outpacing its historical average return of 10% a year.
Here are Goldman’s top five predictions for what comes next:
The bull market in stocks will chug on in 2026, but the blistering rally will cool down slightly.
The S&P 500 is on track to rise to around 7,600 by the end of the year, strategists wrote, implying a 12% gain for the benchmark index. That puts Goldman’s outlook solidly in the middle of the pack among Wall Street forecasters, with other banks calling for a rise in the range of 3% to 16% in the next year.
That gain will largely be driven by strong earnings growth in the S&P 500, a team of strategists at Goldman suggested. In the note, they pointed to factors like strong economic growth, increased productivity from AI, and strong profits among large companies, which will provide the “fundamental base” for the bull market to continue.
The climate will favor cyclical invesments in early 2026, thanks to the US economy picking up steam.
Strategists pointed to growth catalysts like economic activity revving up after the government reopened, stimulus from President Donald Trump’s Big Beautiful Bill, looser financial conditions, and a less-than-expected economic impact from tariffs. All those should also support cyclical investments, which, by definition, outperform when the economy expands.
“Corporates should be able to enjoy the revenue tailwinds from economic acceleration without facing the trade-offs from increased wage pressures or Fed tightening that often characterize late-cycle environments,” the bank wrote.

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