
The stock market has been on a tremendous run, one that may simply be too good to last.
Bank of America analysts agree, with Wall Street still heavily reliant on the turbulent AI trade.
BofA isn’t calling for anything dramatic, but clearly, the easy part of the rally is over, with investors looking to take some profits.
It’s safe to say that over the past month, the S&P 500 has stopped making clean progress.
The index has barely moved over the past month, rising from 7,398.93 on May 8 to 7,405.73 on June 8, a gain of just 0.1%.
Much of that pressure came on June 5, when it suffered its steepest drop since October, plunging 2.64% to 7,383.74.
According to Yahoo Finance, that carnage eroded an eye-popping $1.8 trillion in value from the S&P 500, with the Nasdaq suffering its biggest one-day drop in history
Though we’ve seen a relief rally of sorts since, led by tech and chip stocks, we’re far from being in the clear.
Interestingly, Goldman Sachs’ John Flood sees the recent drop as a “buying opportunity”.
Despite the precarious backdrop, Flood and his team remain constructive, forecasting that the S&P 500 will reach 8,000 and beyond this year.
Citi analysts took it a step further, raising their S&P 500 target to 8,100, citing the market’s strong earnings power.
The warning is pertinent, coming at a point when investor confidence is still relatively high.
Big Tech earnings have held up much better than expected, but a lot of that enthusiasm has been offset by fading rate-cut hopes. Nevertheless, the biggest tech stocks continue to carry the market higher.
BofA analysts, though, see a far more complicated picture underneath the surface.
Bank of America sees market risk building
Bank of America analysts feel the risk-reward setup for stocks has become a lot less forgiving.
More Wall Street:
The firm argued that nearly 70% of bear-market indicators have been triggered.
Historically, those levels have been linked to periods of vulnerability, when stocks became much more prone to pullbacks.
BofA cited elevated stock valuations, rising speculative trading activity, and concentration risks to support its thesis.
Investors continue to bet on three primary supports: AI demand, resilient corporate earnings, and potential interest rate cuts.
Though the first two points seem less concerning, the prospect of rate cuts continues to fade, especially after the recent “hot” jobs report.



