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Morgan Stanley raised its annual target ​for the benchmark S&P 500 index ‌on Wednesday, saying U.S. stocks had enough room to rally as companies continue to post strong earnings.

The brokerage lifted its annual target for the ⁠index to 8,000 ​from 7,800, with an 8-per-cent upside to the index’s Tuesday close of 7,400 points.

Per-share earnings estimates for S&P 500 companies were set at US$339 for 2026, a 23-per-cent jump from a year earlier, ​based on expectations of efficiency gains from broader ‌AI adoption as well as improving pricing power.

“Our bullish index view is an earnings story, not a multiple expansion one,” Morgan Stanley said, adding that valuations may compress modestly as expectations for near-term interest rate cuts fade.

Of the ‌440 S&P ​500 companies that have ‌reported first-quarter earnings up to May 8, about 83.2 per cent have beaten analyst ​estimates, according to LSEG I/B/E/S data.

The benchmark ⁠index also ended April with its biggest monthly percentage gain ⁠since November 2020, underscoring the strength of the recent rebound in U.S. equities ​amid the ongoing Middle East conflict.

“Over the next 12 months, we see the rolling recovery continuing to progress, driven by a strong earnings environment as positive operating leverage persists and is further enhanced by AI adoption,” Morgan Stanley said.

“Resiliency in earnings ⁠data despite geopolitical risk, private credit concerns and AI disruption is supportive of our view,” it added, although it sees inflation as a major threat to its thesis.

Morgan Stanley’s 2027 mid-year target for the benchmark index was bumped to 8,300, while the EPS for the ⁠components were pegged at US$380 for 2027 and US$429 ​for 2028.

Earlier this month, HSBC and RBC also raised their S&P ⁠500 forecasts, reflecting growing optimism on Wall Street about the outlook for U.S. equities.

In a separate ‌note, Morgan Stanley also lifted its 2027 mid-year target for the MSCI Europe ​index to 2,700 from 2,600.

“Our target assumes the Strait of Hormuz reopens in the coming months, at which point we expect a resumption in broadening flows and tactical catch-up to U.S. ​strength,” Morgan Stanley added.

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