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Franklin Templeton's bold forecast for further S&P 500 gains stuns Wall Street

The S&P 500 has surged higher over the past five weeks at a pace that few strategists predicted at the start of 2026, yet one of the largest asset managers on the planet believes the rally is far from finished.

Franklin Templeton Institute, the research arm of the approximately $1.68 trillion investment firm, has established a year-end target range of 7,000 to 7,400 for the benchmark index in commentaries dating to its January "Rotational Bull" outlook and reiterated in its March 31 "Volatility Rising" update.

The forecast is built on corporate earnings growth that its own portfolio managers describe as broader and stronger than anything seen in half a decade. The call arrives at a moment when technical indicators are flashing caution signals and geopolitical risks remain elevated.

Franklin Templeton forecasts 8% to 13% earnings growth to fuel the S&P 500 rally

Chris Galipeau, senior market strategist at Franklin Templeton Institute, anchored the firm's bullish outlook to a single central thesis in its commentaries. Earnings growth, not geopolitical developments, drives stock prices over the long term.

The firm's target range of 7,000 to 7,400 is grounded in expectations of 8% to 13% year-over-year earnings-per-share growth, a forecast derived from its Global Investment Management Survey, which collected responses from roughly 200 portfolio managers, directors of research, and chief investment officers across multiple asset classes, Franklin Templeton Institute noted.

The current S&P 500 earnings-per-share estimate stands at $331.81, a figure that climbed roughly $4 in a single week and represents year-over-year growth of approximately 20%, which surpasses the high end of Franklin Templeton's initial forecast range, Galipeau wrote.

Earnings season is delivering historic results for S&P 500 companies

The broader earnings picture reinforces Franklin Templeton's optimism, with data showing this reporting season is shaping up to be one of the strongest in recent memory, a trend that directly supports the case for continued stock market gains through the end of 2026.

Approximately 63% of S&P 500 companies had reported first-quarter results as of May 1, 2026, and 84% of those companies beat analyst earnings estimates, marking the highest beat rate since the second quarter of 2021, FactSet reported.

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Companies in aggregate are reporting profits that exceed forecasts by 20.7%, which towers above both the five-year average surprise of 7.3% and the 10-year average of 7.1%, marking the highest surprise percentage reported by the index since Q1 2021, FactSet reported.

For Q2 2026, analysts now project earnings growth of 21.3%, with full-year 2026 earnings growth estimated at 18.6%, according to FactSet.

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Technical signals suggest the S&P 500 may need a breather before climbing higher

Franklin Templeton's bullish call comes with a notable caveat that investors would be wise to take seriously. The S&P 500 has surged 15% from its late-March lows, pushing the Relative Strength Index to 73, a level that technical analysts widely consider a signal of short-term overbought conditions.

The RSI had plunged to just 28 when the CBOE Volatility Index spiked to 31, and the S&P 500 was trading near 6,316 during a period of intense geopolitical uncertainty. The market's momentum has swung from extreme fear to extreme optimism in a remarkably short window of time, Galipeau noted in his May 5 commentary.

Julian Emanuel, chief equity, derivatives, and quantitative strategist at Evercore ISI, described the recent rebound as historic, noting that the 14-day RSI moved from oversold to overbought territory in the days following the March 30 low, one of the fastest such swings since 1982, The Motley Fool reported.

Franklin Templeton sees stock market broadening beyond mega-cap tech names

One of the most consequential elements of Franklin Templeton's outlook is its conviction that the stock market's gains are spreading beyond the handful of mega-cap technology companies that dominated returns over the past two years, a shift that could benefit investors who hold diversified portfolios.

"Looking forward, we think the non-U.S. space is going to do better than what we've seen over the last decade," said Jeff Schulze, CFA, Head of Economic and Market Strategy, ClearBridge Investments, in a Kiplinger interview.

Year-to-date performance data through April 30, 2026, illustrate this broadening trend with striking clarity. The Russell 2000 Value Index gained 15.25%, the Russell 2000 Index rose 13.32%, and the S&P MidCap 400 Growth Index climbed 12.34%, all of which outpaced the S&P 500's 5.69% gain and the Magnificent 7 basket's modest 1.05% advance, the firm's data showed.

Geopolitical risk, elevated oil prices remain biggest threats to S&P 500 forecast

Franklin Templeton identified the duration of the conflict in the Middle East as the primary threat to its constructive outlook, warning that elevated oil prices function like a tax on consumers and that the negative effects of expensive energy will compound over time if the situation persists, Galipeau explained.

The firm entered 2026 expecting the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates twice and for core personal consumption expenditures to remain stable in the 2.5% to 3.0% range, but the path of monetary policy remains uncertain as long as energy-driven inflation pressures continue to cloud the economic outlook, the commentary indicated.

Jeff Schulze, head of economic and market strategy at Franklin Templeton affiliate ClearBridge Investments, echoed the cautious optimism in a separate outlook. Schulze noted that stock market returns in 2025 were driven entirely by earnings delivery rather than valuation expansion, Benefits and Pensions Monitor noted.

What Franklin Templeton's forecast means for your investment portfolio

Franklin Templeton's forecast reflects a growing divide on Wall Street between concerns about stretched valuations and confidence in the strength of corporate earnings.

While the firm believes profit growth can continue supporting higher stock prices through the end of 2026, other analysts remain cautious about geopolitical tensions, inflation pressures, and the pace of the market's recent rebound.

The debate underscores how dependent the current rally has become on companies continuing to deliver strong financial results quarter after quarter.

Whether the S&P 500 ultimately reaches Franklin Templeton's target range may depend less on investor sentiment and more on whether earnings growth can remain resilient amid an increasingly uncertain global backdrop.

Related: Franklin Templeton plots a bold hedge fund pivot

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This story was originally published May 8, 2026 at 7:33 PM.

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