Stronger earnings and high valuations set stage for more stock gains
Record highs show no sign of slowing. Futures Monday point to the S&P 500 logging its 15th record of 2025, as investors cheer tariff agreements that once seemed damaging but now signal stability.

Morgan Stanley’s chief strategist Mike Wilson has shifted toward a S&P 500 bullish outlook, projecting the index at 7,200 within 12 months. His forecast is built on EPS of $319 and a 22.5x forward P/E multiple, driven by:
- Resilient earnings and cash flow fueled by AI adoption, dollar weakness, and tax savings from the Trump administration’s “One Big Beautiful Bill Act.”
- Easier growth comparisons after “rolling earnings recessions” over the past three years.
- Expanding profit margins as wage growth moderates and AI boosts efficiency.
Wilson also points to expected Fed rate cuts in early 2026, historically a key driver of multiple expansion. His analysis shows that when earnings growth is above the median and rates are falling, valuations rise 90% of the time.

While tariffs could pressure consumer goods, Wilson notes policy uncertainty peaked in April as stocks bottomed. He favors industrials, citing durable earnings revisions, stabilizing capacity utilization, and surging commercial loan growth. Top picks include Rockwell Automation, Eaton, Trane Technologies, and Johnson Controls — all poised to benefit from domestic infrastructure and tech spending.
Risks remain: sticky long-term Treasury yields, tariff-driven inflation, and seasonal headwinds could spark tactical pullbacks. But Wilson sees dips as buying opportunities, expecting any corrections to stay shallow heading into 2026.