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30 April 2026 | 6 minute read
For the bull market to persist through 2026, we think some catalysts need to converge and an obstacle must be overcome:
A tall order? Perhaps, but we’re mindful the market has jumped over high hurdles before.
RBC Global Asset Management, LLP’s Chief Economist Eric Lascelles anticipates U.S. GDP will grow 2.2 percent in 2026, right at the 2.2 percent average since 2000 and above the 1.9 percent consensus forecast.
While the gap between tech and non-tech earnings growth rates should shrink further, overall S&P 500 profit growth will likely still be heavily impacted by AI capital spending and cloud computing given these stocks represent a large share of the market’s value (aka capitalisation). The 2026 S&P 500 consensus profit forecast looks somewhat lofty to us: 12.8 percent year-over-year growth based on $310 earnings per share. We’re still wary of the market’s elevated forward price-to-earnings (P/E) valuation of 21.3x compared to the 18.6x 10‑year average; however, we don’t think high P/Es will create problems until economic and/or earnings growth begin to buckle.
S&P 500 earnings grew at the following rates on a year-over-year basis. 2022 5.4%, 2023 0.9%, 2024 9.8%. The consensus forecast is for earnings to growth 11.6% in 2025 and 12.8% in 2026.
Source – RBC Wealth Management, Bloomberg (past earnings growth and consensus forecasts for 2025 and 2026); data as of 11/24/25
Questions about whether AI is in a bubble should linger into 2026, at least. We’re uncomfortable with certain aspects of the boom, including the recent surge in circular financing deals – when a large AI company invests in a smaller AI company/startup, and the latter uses part or much of the financing to buy hardware and/or services from the large AI company. The possibility that unprecedented capex spending could soon run into power generation and related regulatory constraints is also of concern. But at this stage, we see certain yellow warning signs rather than a full-fledged bubble.
We begin 2026 with a Market Weight allocation to U.S. equities and favour dividend growth stocks because of their defensive characteristics and the Health Care sector due to its potential for improved earnings growth. We advise investors to be nimble overall and vigilant about single-stock and sector exposures by bringing them back in balance when they drift out of bounds.
We see the Federal Reserve holding interest rates steady for the bulk of 2026. Near-term bias remains toward further cuts to around 3.75 percent or 3.50 percent. But with core inflation likely to hold north of three percent next year even as the unemployment rate is projected to rise modestly to 4.6 percent, in our view, we see little scope for interest rates to fall further. In fact, should recent monetary policy easing – paired with fiscal stimulus via tax cuts – stoke stronger economic activity next year, we think markets could pivot the focus to the potential for rate hikes in late 2026 and into 2027.
Twenty-twenty-five was a historically strong year for bond market performance, but we expect more-muted total return prospects for bonds in 2026. The Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond Index, a benchmark comprising investment-grade government and corporate bonds, began 2025 with an average yield of 4.9 percent. But as yields have declined, in turn pushing bond prices higher, the total return realised by investors has been even greater at 7.1 percent, one of the best years since 2000.
The chart shows the starting yield levels on the Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond Index since 2006, compared to the average index yield of 3.4% over that timeframe. In 2006, the Bloomberg U.S. Aggregate Bond Index was 5.1%, climbed to a timeframe high of 5.3% in 2007, and then gradually fell to 1.7% in 2013. It trended up to 3.3% in 2019, and then down to a timeframe low of 1.1% in 2021. After which, it rose to 4.7% in 2023, with it sitting at 4.9% as of November 10, 2025. The 2026 estimate is 4.4%.
RBC Wealth Management, Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond Index; current yield data as of 11/10/25
Given our expectations of minimal Fed rate cuts, near-average economic growth, and elevated inflation above the Fed’s target, we see scope for modestly higher yields, putting downward pressure on prices and therefore total returns. We project the 10-year Treasury yield to end 2026 at 4.55 percent, up from 4.06 percent currently.
Credit markets remain historically rich and exposed to potential headwinds in 2026. The Bloomberg U.S. Investment Grade Corporate Bond Index offers investors just 0.85 percent of incremental yield over comparable Treasuries. We anticipate greater bond supply, largely from tech firms looking to finance AI-related capital expenditures, to weigh on the corporate bond sector and overall performance next year.
Municipal bonds were one of the more attractive fixed income sectors in 2025, but a rally to close out the year has diminished most of its appeal. That said, we see lingering value in bonds beyond 10 years on the curve where yields remain above recent averages.
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