
The S&P 500 has climbed to near-record highs despite growing concerns about valuations, AI spending, and signs of speculative behavior across parts of the market.
The S&P 500 has rallied 8% year to date, after delivering double-digit gains in 2023, 2024, and 2025.
Investors have recently watched Micron reach a $1 trillion valuation, shares of SanDisk and Intel soar, and demand for a potential SpaceXIPO reach a fever pitch. At the same time, the market suffered a sharp pullback on June 5 as investors questioned whether the AI trade had gone too far.
Goldman Sachs believes the recent volatility has not changed the bigger picture.
“The path will remain bumpy, but earnings growth should continue to lift US equities,” Goldman analysts wrote in a recent note sent to TheStreet.
The firm expects the S&P 500 index to rise another 8% by year-end, reaching 8,000.
Earnings growth is the fundamental bull engine
While investors debate valuations and AI spending, Goldman says that corporate earnings remain the most important factor.
“Earnings growth should continue to lift US equities,” the firm wrote.
Goldman expects S&P 500 earnings per share to grow 24% in 2026 and another 13% in 2027.
The firm pointed to a strong first quarter, when aggregate S&P 500 earnings rose 18% year over year, excluding certain one-time items. The median company posted earnings growth of 14%, making it one of the strongest quarters in roughly a decade.
Goldman also pushed back against concerns that a surge in stock issuance could undermine the rally.
The firm estimates U.S. companies will issue roughly $700 billion of equity this year, equivalent to about 1% of Russell 3000 market capitalization and roughly in line with historical averages.
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Meanwhile, Goldman expects companies to repurchase about $1 trillion of stock, helping absorb new supply.
The firm said IPO activity is increasing but remains far below the levels seen during previous market peaks. Goldman expects roughly 100 IPOs this year, compared with more than 250 in 2021 and nearly 400 during the dot-com era.
Goldman says the AI boom is still accelerating
Artificial intelligence remains at the center of the market’s biggest debate. Some investors are concerned that the massive spending by technology companies may not ultimately generate returns enough to justify the industry’s soaring valuations.
Goldman acknowledges those concerns but sees little evidence that spending is slowing.
“The AI investment boom shows no sign of slowing,” the firm wrote.



