Wall Street's Sharpest Minds Predict Where Stocks Are Headed In 2012
Wall Street's top strategists have been unveiling their 2012 S&P 500 year end forecasts. Calls range from bold and ballsy to reluctant and conservative.
They see the S&P 500 ending 2012 slightly lower to up as much as 20% from yesterday's close of 1,254. Earnings are expected to be flat to up around 10%. Most see modest GDP growth in the U.S., and many expect more quantitative easing from the Fed. However, all warn that Europe remains a wild card. Most assume a eurozone recession in their base case scenario. But should Europe's debt crisis escalate and contagion ensue, all bets are off and stocks will tank. Then again, if the crisis is contained, then most would argue that the sky's the limit.
We've written before that our favorite line came from Nomura's 2012 Global Strategy Outlook:
Putting things bluntly, either we have another very serious credit event with consequences at least as severe as the Lehman Brothers bankruptcy, or stocks are probably a buy.
Anyway, we read through hundreds of pages of research published by 16 of Wall Street's very best. Here's a summary of their 2012 forecasts:
S&P 500 2012 Close:
Mean: 1,363
Range: 1,167 to 1,500
S&P 500 2012 EPS:
Mean: $102.40
Range: $96 to $106
(Note: This feature originally appeared on Business Insider on December 23, 2011. It also includes updates effective January 3, 2012)
Morgan Stanley - 1,167
Read more: http://www.businessinsider.com/top-equity-strategists-forecast-2012-2011-12?op=1#ixzz1nbgRmRhV