
JPMorgan Raises S&P 500 Target to 7,800 as Wall Street Closes a Turbulent First Half on an Upbeat Note
The Bank’s Strategists Cite an AI-Driven Earnings Surge and a Potential Peace Dividend, but Warn That Speculative Momentum in Secondary Tech Stocks Has Reached Flash-Crash Territory Wall Street enters its final trading day of the first half on Monday with a picture that looks considerably different from where it stood three months ago. The S&P 500 is up approximately 8% to 9% year-to-date after recovering sharply from its March lows, the Dow Jones Industrial Average sits above 51,900, and JPMorgan Chase — the nation’s largest bank by assets and a fixture of the New York financial landscape since the 19th century — has raised its year-end target for the benchmark index to 7,800, implying roughly 6% additional upside from the index’s recent close near 7,365. The revised call, published June 24 from the firm’s Park Avenue headquarters, represents more than a routine number change. JPMorgan’s equity strategist Dubravko Lakos-Bujas accompanied the new target with a concession that the firm had been “much too cautious” about earnings expectations. The bank lifted its 2026 S&P 500 earnings-per-share estimate to $350, projecting 29% year-over-year growth — a pace typically seen only in recovery years following economic shocks — and set its 2027 EPS













































