HSBC sees explosive upside for S&P 500 despite global risk fears

May 11, 2026

HSBC has raised its year-end target for the S&P 500 to 7,650 from 7,500, arguing that a run of strong quarterly earnings has given fresh support to US equities even as investors continue to weigh inflation risks tied to higher oil prices and the conflict in the Middle East.

The new target implies upside of about 3.4% from the index’s recent level of 7,398.93.

The upgrade comes with Wall Street already near record highs, suggesting HSBC believes the earnings backdrop remains strong enough to support further gains, even as the macro environment becomes more complicated.

The bank’s revised call reflects a market that has continued to push higher on the strength of corporate America, particularly in large-cap technology.

Strong profit growth, resilience in margins and the continued investor appetite for companies linked to artificial intelligence have helped equities absorb concerns over oil, inflation and geopolitics.

What changed in HSBC’s outlook

HSBC’s more constructive stance appears to rest mainly on earnings momentum.

According to data cited in the report, first-quarter earnings growth for the S&P 500 came in close to 29%, giving strategists more confidence that profit expectations can continue to move higher.

That matters because the market’s rally has increasingly depended on companies delivering on high expectations.

In lifting its target, HSBC also raised its estimate for 2026 earnings per share for the S&P 500 to around 20% growth, or $325, indicating that the bank expects profit expansion to remain the central driver of returns.

The message is straightforward: as long as earnings keep surprising to the upside, the market can continue to look through some of the broader macro noise.

That does not mean risks have disappeared, but it does mean the earnings engine is still powerful enough to dominate the short-term narrative.

AI and megacap tech still lead

A key part of that earnings story remains the leadership of megacap technology stocks.

HSBC said those companies continue to rank highest in its outlook, reinforcing the idea that the biggest beneficiaries of AI spending are still expected to drive a large share of index-level gains.

That theme has become critical for the wider market.

Investors have rewarded companies seen as direct winners from spending on chips, cloud infrastructure, data centres and software tools linked to AI.

In turn, their weight in the benchmark means strength in a relatively small group of stocks can still have an outsized effect on the direction of the S&P 500.

Still, that concentration also comes with a challenge. If leadership remains too narrow, investors may begin to question how durable the rally really is.

HSBC appears aware of that risk and suggests that, for the market to move convincingly higher from here, more stocks will need to participate in the advance.

Breadth will matter from here

That is where market breadth enters the picture.

HSBC noted that many stocks still sit below their 52-week highs, leaving room for the rally to broaden before the market reaches a peak.

A wider advance across sectors would reduce the risk of over-reliance on a handful of large technology names and make gains appear more sustainable.

For investors, this is an important shift in emphasis.

The next leg higher may not depend solely on the same leaders doing more of the heavy lifting.

Instead, it could require underperforming sectors to recover, more companies to show they can benefit from AI-related demand and a stable enough economic backdrop to support earnings outside the biggest growth names.

Why it matters for investors

HSBC’s target increase matters because it signals that one major global bank still sees room for equities to rise, despite a backdrop that remains far from benign.

Oil prices, inflation risks and tensions in the Middle East are all potential obstacles, and each could unsettle sentiment if they worsen.

Even so, the bank’s view is that corporate earnings remain the strongest guide for markets in the near term.

That leaves investors with a fairly clear framework: if profits keep improving and leadership broadens beyond the largest technology names, the S&P 500 may still have scope to move higher.

If either of those pillars weakens, the room for error becomes much smaller.

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