So here’s the thing about bull markets: they’re like that friend who keeps showing up to parties even though everyone’s wondering when they’ll finally leave. The current one? It’s been hanging around since late 2022, and it’s showing no signs of heading for the door.
The numbers are wild. The S&P 500 crushed it in 2025 with an 18% gain, hitting all-time highs. The Nasdaq? Up 22.3%. Even the Dow got in on the action with a 14.5% jump. We’re talking three consecutive years of double-digit returns—something that doesn’t happen every day.
But here’s where it gets spicy: Wall Street can’t seem to agree on what happens next. It’s like asking five financial advisors where the market’s headed and getting five different answers (which, let’s be honest, is exactly what happens).
On the bullish end, Oppenheimer’s throwing out an 8,100 target for the S&P 500 by year-end 2026—that’s a 17% gain from here. Morgan Stanley’s sitting at 7,800 (12.5% upside), while JP Morgan’s playing it safe in the middle with 7,500. Their reasoning? Corporate earnings are crushing it, AI efficiency gains are real, and the Fed might cut rates. Sounds good, right?
Then there’s Bank of America, the party pooper, predicting just 7,100—basically a 2.6% yawn. Their concern? Valuations are getting ridiculous. The Shiller P/E ratio is near all-time highs at 40.59, and the Nasdaq 100 trades at 34 times earnings. That’s historically expensive territory.
Here’s what actually matters: Can AI keep delivering the goods, or are we sitting on a valuation bubble waiting to pop? The market’s been riding the AI wave hard, and Nvidia’s up 40% year-to-date. But at these prices, the margin for error is razor-thin.
The bull market’s still got legs, but it’s definitely looking tired. Whether it charges ahead or stumbles depends on whether corporate earnings can justify these valuations. That’s the real story nobody’s talking about.