Wall Street's 2022 stock market forecasts were way off. Here's what they see in 2023: Morning Brief

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Wednesday, December 28, 2022

Today's newsletter is by Julie Hyman, anchor and correspondent at Yahoo Finance. Follow Julie on Twitter @juleshyman. Read this and more market news on the go with Yahoo Finance App.

We all have our little traditions to end a year.

Some people make resolutions, or "best of" lists.

I look back at stock market forecasts from the prior year.

Part of Wall Street strategists' job is to set targets for the S&P 500. And as equities limp toward the finish line for 2022, I wondered if anyone had seen the drop coming.

The short answer is no.

As of November 2021, the median of 12 forecasts was 4,825, according to Bloomberg. The highest was 5,300, from Brian Belski of BMO. The lowest was 4,400, from reliable bear Michael Wilson of Morgan Stanley.

With three trading days to go in 2022, the S&P 500 closed at 3,829.

To be fair, there were a lot of unpredictables this year. Unprecedented, some might say.

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine was chief among them. Investors also had to contend with China’s continuing COVID shutdown, persistent global inflation, a sharp drop in bonds along with stocks, a tech plunge, and a huge (alleged) crypto fraud. And this list is not exhaustive.

Some strategists anticipated those events — with the exception of the first — but few got it all right.

Of course, the strategists changed their forecasts as more information rolled in. By mid-September, around the time the index was making what turned out to be its lows for the year, the median of 23 forecasts had moved down to 4,300. By mid-October, it had fallen further, to 3,988.

Forecasting is especially tricky when it comes to picking the level where an index will end the year. Strategists use models with a multitude of inputs, both "top-down" (i.e. aggregate earnings estimates) and "bottoms-up" (i.e. company-specific earnings estimates).

And some strategists avoid the index-forecast game entirely.

One of them is Michael Darda of MKM Partners, who carefully couched his S&P target comments in a recent note to investors.

"Back in 2020, the S&P 500 bottomed at about 18x five-year forward estimates, which would be about 3300 or so, roughly a 14% fall from where the S&P 500 closed last week," Darda wrote. "Although this is simply a rough starting assumption (it could be worse and also could be better if we are wrong about a recession next year) keep in mind that in the event of a downturn, markets usually bottom out about two-thirds of the way through the recession (or four-to-five months before a recovery begins)."

When asked why he avoids a specific target, Darda quoted famous economist John Maynard Keynes: "Better to be roughly right than precisely wrong."

16th March 1940:  John Maynard Keynes, English economist and pioneer of the theory of full employment. Original Publication: Picture Post - 361 - Mr. Keynes Has A Plan - pub. 1940  (Photo by Tim Gidal/Picture Post/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
16th March 1940: John Maynard Keynes, English economist and pioneer of the theory of full employment. (Photo by Tim Gidal/Picture Post/Hulton Archive/Getty Images) (Tim Gidal via Getty Images)

Speaking with Yahoo Finance Live on Monday, Baird’s Michael Antonelli also declined to offer an S&P 500 price target while sharing some of his 2023 projections, including his view that the Federal Reserve's next interest rate increase will be its last of this cycle.

"What you really want to dig into when it comes to a strategist's view is how adaptable they are to change," Antonelli said in a follow-up message. "Do they stick with a bullish or bearish view as the year unfolds? The best ones are open to changing their minds or admitting being wrong."

For individual investors, it might make more sense to track themes and broad predictions than to invest based on where, exactly, some expert thinks an index will end the year. And although this columnist avoids making forecasts of any kind, if nothing else, it's fun to keep track of those that do.

In that spirit, then, as of December 1, the median forecast from 17 strategists for the S&P 500 at the end of 2023 was 4,000. The highest, at 4,500, comes courtesy of Binky Chadha at Deutsche Bank. The lowest, at 3,400, comes not from Wilson of Morgan Stanley, but rather Greg Boutle at BNP Paribas. (Wilson is at 3,900, but expects a slump during the year).

Programming note: John Stolzfus, Oppenheimer Asset Management Chief Investment Strategist, will join Yahoo Finance Live at 10 a.m. ET today. His S&P 500 target for the end of 2023 is 4,400.

What to Watch Today

Economy

  • 10:00 a.m. ET: Richmond Fed Manufacturing Index, December (-10 expected, -9 during prior month)

  • 10:00 a.m. ET: Pending Home Sales, month-over-month, November (-1.0% expected, -4.6% during prior month)

  • 10:00 a.m. ET: Pending Home Sales NSA, year-over-year, November (-36.7% during prior month)

Earnings

  • No notable reports scheduled for release.

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