USA TODAY International Edition

What stock market pros are predicting for 2018

- Adam Shell

It’s crystal ball time for Wall Street stock strategist­s.

For 2018, will it be a big gain for stocks? Or little or no gain? Depends whom you ask.

The most optimistic forecaster says the U.S. stock market — which has risen nearly 20% this year — will post another year of sizable returns.

The market’s biggest skeptic thinks the rally will stall and stocks will end next year pretty much where they’re trading now.

That said, year-end prediction­s are more art than science. And predicting the future isn’t necessaril­y Wall Street’s strong suit. At the start of 2017, for example, not a single strategist at 18 top banks saw the Standard & Poor’s 500 stock index rising as much as it has. The average gain predicted was 5.5%, and the biggest bull saw stocks rising 12%, according to Bloomberg.

If the average prediction had been right, a 401(k) investor with $10,000 invested in the S&P 500 at the start of 2017 would have gained $550. That’s well shy of the market’s actual return of nearly $2,000.

Reviewing Wall Street pros’ prediction­s for the year ahead, however, provides investors with an outline of factors that might move stock prices.

A USA TODAY analysis of more than a dozen 2018 prediction­s from Wall Street’s biggest banks found a wide variation in where stocks are headed. The most bullish year-end price target for the S&P 500 is 3,100, or nearly 16% higher than its current level of 2,680. The least optimistic prediction is 2,750, which represents a gain of less than 3%. The average target is 2,883, or a return of roughly 7.5%.

No one is calling for a big drop in stock prices.

Here’s what the gurus are predicting for stocks in 2018:

BULL CALL: BIG GAIN (+16%)

The reason for the most bullish call on Wall Street can be summed up in one word: earnings. And investors can point to President Trump and the Republican Congress, who have put into law a taxcut plan that will likely boost U.S. companies.

Tony Dwyer, chief market strategist at New York financial firm Canaccord Genuity, says lower corporate taxes under the plan will add up to bigger profits and larger stock gains in 2018.

Dwyer last week raised his year-end 2018 target for the S&P 500 to 3,100, up from an earlier prediction of 2,800, when it became clear that the proposal to slash the corporate tax rate to 21% from 35% would become a reality.

Wall Street’s biggest bull now expects the 500 big companies in the index to post overall earnings per share of $155 next year, up more than 10% from his prior earnings forecast that didn’t include the tax cuts.

Dwyer is advising investors to buy stocks next year even if they suffer periodic declines in price.

And while Dwyer says there is a good “possibilit­y of a near-term correction,” he says the market still has a number of factors working in its favor. His upbeat outlook for stocks assumes the market will benefit from a continuing recovery in the global economy, accelerati­ng business activity in the U.S., more investment spending by businesses, rising wages and the profit boost from corporate tax cuts.

THE TYPICAL CALL: SINGLE-DIGIT GAIN (+6%)

After big gains this year, most Wall Street strategist­s see the market posting single-digit percentage gains in 2018. David Kostin, chief equity strategist at Goldman Sachs, whose year-end S&P 500 target of 2,850 is near the average, sees the market rising 6.3%.

Kostin downplays fears of a mania and bases his outlook on “rational exuberance.” The key underpinni­ngs of the market remain in place, including faster GDP growth, slowly rising interest rates and corporate profit growth aided by tax cuts.

“The bull market will continue in

2018,” Kostin says.

BEAR CALL: SMALL GAIN (+3%)

Don’t expect another year of big gains and market calm, says Michael Wilson, chief U.S. equity strategist at Morgan Stanley. Instead, prepare for bigger price drops from time to time and an annual gain of just 2% to 3% in 2018, he says. His year-end target is 2,750.

Why is Wilson, one of Wall Street’s biggest bulls in 2017, turning more cautious? A lot of the good news, such as improving growth around the globe and strong corporate earnings, may already be reflected in higher stock prices, he says. Investors, he warns, might start pricing in “deteriorat­ing” business conditions. “Calm is likely to wane,” Wilson warns in his outlook report.

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