HomeBusinessGoldman Sachs revamps S&P 500 target for 2026

Goldman Sachs revamps S&P 500 target for 2026

Rate cuts are coming, and that’s good news for the S&P 500. The question is: How big, and how good?

The latest jobs data is bad enough to force the Fed off its seat and reduce interest rates for the first time since late 2024, when it cut its Fed Funds Rate by one percentage point.

The labor market’s weaknesses are widespread, reflecting increased unemployment, layoffs, and less hiring.

Since encouraging low unemployment is one of the Federal Reserve’s mandates, most Wall Street analysts are convinced that Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell will shift gears and target jobs instead of inflation at its next meeting on Sept. 17, including Goldman Sachs.

Goldman Sachs is considered one of Wall Street’s gold standard companies for research and analysis, with roots tracing back to 1869.

On Sept. 6, its analysts revisited their S&P 500 targets for the rest of 2025 and 2026 based on their rate cut expectations.

The S&P 500 performs best when interest rates are heading lower. The Fed doesn’t control bank lending rates, but it does indirectly influence them because it sets the Fed Funds Rate, the interest banks charge one another on overnight loans of reserves.

Goldman Sachs updated its S&P 500 targets for 2025 and 2026 following the August unemployment report.Image source: TheStreet

The higher the rate, the more banks charge for consumer and business loans. As rates fall, bank loan rates usually follow, providing more wiggle room for households and businesses to spend, propping up corporate revenue, profits, and stock prices.

According to Bank of America, the S&P 500 gains 1.7% per month on average during “rate-cutting regimes.” When rates are rising, it loses 0.5% monthly.

The Fed has resisted lowering rates this year, fearing that doing so would fan inflationary fires even as the full impact of tariffs flows through to consumer prices.

Related: Bank of America announces huge shift in Fed rate cut forecast

There’s evidence that the Fed isn’t wrong to be nervous since Consumer Price Index (CPI) inflation has risen since April:

  • July: 2.7%

  • June: 2.7%

  • May: 2.4%

  • April: 2.3%

Nevertheless, Goldman Sachs thinks the shift in the jobs data this summer will trump that fear, clearing the way for Chairman Powell and company to embrace dovish rate cuts soon.

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