Stock Markets May 18, 2026 09:42 AM

BofA Lifts 2026 S&P EPS Call; Defends Semiconductors Against 'Bubble' Claims

Bank of America raises 2026 S&P 500 EPS outlook to $335, highlights stronger semiconductor fundamentals while cautioning on lofty growth expectations

By Avery Klein
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Bank of America has increased its 2026 S&P 500 earnings-per-share estimate to $335, signaling 22% year-over-year growth, while maintaining a guarded stance on the index overall. Analyst Savita Subramanian disputes the popular view that semiconductors are in a valuation bubble and software stocks are cheap, pointing to upgraded semiconductor earnings driven by AI capital expenditure and stronger free cash flow metrics.

BofA Lifts 2026 S&P EPS Call; Defends Semiconductors Against 'Bubble' Claims
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Key Points

  • BofA raised its 2026 S&P 500 EPS forecast to $335, implying 22% year-over-year growth.
  • Semiconductor earnings have been revised up more than 20% this year due to increased AI capex guidance, while software earnings have grown about 3% in the same period.
  • BofA keeps a cautious index-level view: the S&P 500 trades expensive on 16 of 20 metrics and the firm maintains a year-end target of 7,100.

Bank of America has raised its 2026 S&P 500 earnings-per-share forecast to $335, implying 22% year-over-year growth, but the firm says it remains cautious on the index at large and pushed back on the common market narrative that semiconductors are overvalued while software shares are undervalued.

In a note to investors, analyst Savita Subramanian said semiconductor earnings have been revised up by more than 20% this year as artificial intelligence capital expenditure guidance increased, whereas software earnings advanced only 3% in the same period.

Despite that divergence in earnings revisions, Subramanian observed that active long-only relative exposure to both sectors stands at roughly 20% overweight. She noted semiconductors are still well below their 2017 peak of 40% overweight, and that software fund ownership breadth has exhibited little change, indicating there has not been a widespread sell-off in software holdings.

“Semiconductors sports its highest free cash flow yield in recent history,” Subramanian wrote, adding that software is trading near multi-year lows on the same metric. In Bank of America's short-term model, semiconductors rank among the top five sectors, while software ranks in the bottom third.

At the index level, BofA kept its year-end S&P 500 price target at 7,100, while noting the index currently trades expensive on 16 of the 20 metrics the firm monitors.

The analyst highlighted a move in the S&P 500 below its historical average price-to-earnings-to-growth ratio after a jump in consensus long-term growth expectations to 16% - the highest level since 2021. Subramanian cautioned that such elevated expectations have historically been a contrarian signal, writing that “growth is more likely to disappoint than exceed lofty expectations.”

“By applying the strong historical relationship to the current forecast, the S&P 500 is slated to decline by ~6%,” Subramanian added.

On sector positioning, Bank of America is overweight Consumer Staples and underweight Consumer Discretionary. The firm said it favors "needs over wants," citing the impact of technology-sector layoffs on consumption by skilled professionals.


What this means

  • BofA sees stronger earnings momentum in semiconductors driven by AI capex revisions, while software earnings revisions have been modest.
  • Valuation signals for the S&P 500 are mixed: the index appears expensive on most of BofA's metrics even as consensus long-term growth expectations have risen.
  • Portfolio tilts favor Consumer Staples over Consumer Discretionary amid concerns about reduced spending by laid-off tech professionals.

Risks

  • Consensus long-term growth expectations have risen to 16%, the highest since 2021; Subramanian warns that such elevated expectations historically suggest growth is more likely to disappoint than to exceed them - this poses downside risk to the S&P 500.
  • BofA's metrics indicate the index is expensive on most measures (16 of 20), creating valuation risk for broad equity exposure.
  • Tech-sector layoffs could reduce spending by skilled professionals, weighing on Consumer Discretionary demand and supporting an overweight stance in Consumer Staples.

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