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  4. The stock market will hit record highs by the end of the year based on Goldilocks scenario, Bank of America says

The stock market will hit record highs by the end of the year based on Goldilocks scenario, Bank of America says

Matthew Fox   

The stock market will hit record highs by the end of the year based on Goldilocks scenario, Bank of America says
Stock Market2 min read
  • The stock market could hit record highs before the end of the year, according to Bank of America.
  • When stocks are up 10%-20% heading into September, the month's returns are positive 65% of the time, BofA said.
  • "2023 has a bullish setup for September and the rest of the year."

The stock market is in a Goldilocks scenario that could make conditions just right for record highs before 2023 is over.

According to a Friday note from Bank of America's technical analyst Stephen Suttmeier, the S&P 500 is entering September in a promising middle ground.

While September is typically the worst month of the year for stock market returns, that's not the case when stocks are already up 10% to 20% heading into the month, he noted. And that's exactly where we are, with the S&P 500 up nearly 18% year to date.

"2023 has a bullish setup for September and the rest of the year," Suttmeier said.

Since 1928, stocks are up only 44% of the time in September with an average and median return of -1.16% and -0.49%, respectively.

But in years when the stock market is up between 10% and 20% heading into September, like it is now, market returns are positive 65% of the time during the month, with an average and median gain of 0.77% and 1.49%, respectively. That's a big improvement.

Additionally, in the same Goldilocks scenario as outlined above, the stock market returns an average and median gain of 7.57% and 8.17%, respectively, and is up 91% of the time from September through December.

"This equates to S&P 500 [at] 4,850 to 4,875 into year-end 2023," Suttmeier said. And that would be a record high for the index, which peaked at 4,818 right before entering a painful year-long bear market in January 2022.

The seasonality data also suggests that the August sell-off in the stock market was healthy and should have been welcomed by investors. That's because without the sell-off, the S&P 500 would have headed into September with a more than 20% year-to-date gain.

According to Suttmeier, year-end returns in the stock market have been weaker when stocks are up that much, as it "may be too extreme for the S&P 500 to continue its winning ways."

Suttmeier found that the stock market is up only 45% of the time in September during this scenario, with an average gain of -0.67%. And from September through December, it's up 64% of the time with an average return of -1.40%.


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