Goldman Sachs (GS) just threw down a bullish forecast for 2026, projecting the S&P 500 will reach 7,600 by year-end. That's a 12% gain from current levels, and it's built on a foundation that looks solid — until you remember the market is trading at valuations that could turn minor hiccups into major headaches.
In its latest equity outlook, the investment bank makes the case that earnings growth will continue doing the heavy lifting. But there's a catch: valuations are stretched enough that any stumble in corporate performance could trigger volatility that's larger than investors might expect.
The Bullish Math Behind 7,600
"We expect another year of solid gains for US equities in 2026," analyst Ben Snider wrote in a note this week.
Goldman's optimism rests on a few key pillars. Economic growth should remain healthy, revenue expansion should support profit margins, and artificial intelligence adoption is starting to deliver tangible productivity gains. The firm expects S&P 500 earnings per share to grow 12% in 2026 and another 10% in 2027.
That earnings focus isn't just speculation — it's historically grounded. In 2025, earnings growth accounted for 14 percentage points of the S&P 500's 16% price return. Since 1990, earnings have contributed eight percentage points annually to the index's 9% annualized return. The pattern is clear: profits drive stocks over time.
Goldman's base case assumes the S&P 500 maintains its current forward price-to-earnings multiple of 22 times — the same level where the market started 2025. Hold that multiple steady, let earnings grow double digits, and you get to 7,600.
"But elevated multiples are hard to ignore, and they increase the magnitude of potential equity market downside if earnings disappoint expectations," Snider cautioned.
The AI Spending Machine Keeps Running (But Slower)
Artificial intelligence spending remains a cornerstone of the bull case. Goldman projects that hyperscaler companies — including Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN), Microsoft Corp. (MSFT), and Meta Platforms — will invest $540 billion in AI-related capital expenditures in 2026. That's equivalent to 75% of their cash flows.
The scale is staggering, but the growth rate is decelerating. After surging 70% year-over-year in 2025, AI capex growth is expected to moderate in 2026. And here's where things get interesting: Goldman notes that companies will increasingly fund this spending through debt issuance rather than cash on hand.
"Capex growth in 2026 will increasingly be funded by debt issuance," the bank said.
This shift could trigger a rotation within AI-related stocks. The focus may move away from hardware and infrastructure providers — the picks-and-shovels plays that dominated the early AI boom — toward companies actually using AI to drive productivity improvements. Goldman calls these "Phase 4" beneficiaries, and they could be the next leg of the AI trade.
Concentration: The Market's Hidden Vulnerability
Here's a risk that's easy to overlook when everything's going up: concentration.
The 10 largest stocks in the S&P 500 now account for roughly 41% of the index's market capitalization. Even more striking, they drove approximately 53% of the index's return in 2025. That means the S&P 500 has essentially become a referendum on a small group of mega-cap tech companies.
When leadership holds, concentration works beautifully. But if those top names stumble — even temporarily — the entire index feels it immediately.
"The micro will drive the macro in 2026," Goldman's analysts wrote. "Rotations among the largest stocks will create two-way risks for the aggregate index."
Can Expensive Markets Keep Climbing?
Goldman's forecast is bullish, but it's not naive. The bank acknowledges that valuations are high and that creates risk. Their base case depends on a supportive macroeconomic backdrop: solid growth and continued Federal Reserve easing, conditions that have historically allowed elevated multiples to persist or even expand.
Comparisons to frothy periods like 2000 or 2021 might be tempting, but Goldman argues the current environment is fundamentally different. Speculative activity remains muted. IPO volumes in 2025 were modest. Short interest is elevated. And equity fund flows have been surprisingly subdued — U.S. equity mutual funds and ETFs saw net inflows of just $100 billion in 2025, equal to 0.2% of S&P 500 market cap. For context, bonds attracted $700 billion.
"The key macro risks today are a deterioration in the growth outlook or a hawkish shift in the interest rate environment," the investment bank noted.
Translation: Goldman is betting on 7,600, but they're not pretending the path is risk-free. Valuations are high, concentration is extreme, and if earnings growth disappoints or the macro picture darkens, the market's cushion is thin. The destination looks promising — getting there might be bumpy.




