BofA Forecasts 8.5% Decline in S&P 500 — Key Factors Behind the Bearish Outlook

06-Jul-2026 Blockonomi

Key Takeaways

  • Savita Subramanian of BofA expresses bearish sentiment toward megacap technology and the Magnificent Seven stocks
  • Artificial intelligence capital expenditures may decelerate economic expansion and impact professional employment sectors, affecting consumer demand
  • Technical analyst at BofA predicts a three-phase downturn that could push the S&P 500 down to 6,850
  • BofA maintains the most conservative S&P 500 forecast on Wall Street at 7,100
  • Subramanian advocates for large-cap value investments in sectors like energy, financial services, and industrial manufacturing

Bank of America has issued a cautionary outlook for U.S. equity markets, with senior strategists advising investors to exercise prudence as 2026 progresses into its latter months.

Savita Subramanian, who leads U.S. equity and quantitative strategy at Bank of America, shared with Barron’s that she maintains a “neutral to negative” stance on equities at the broader index level. Her primary apprehension centers on large-capitalization technology companies.

“I see no compelling rationale to continue accumulating positions in the Magnificent Seven or megacap technology equities,” she stated.

The Hidden Costs of AI Infrastructure Investment

Subramanian highlights significant risks associated with the ongoing artificial intelligence infrastructure expansion. She drew an analogy to residential remodeling projects — they typically exceed initial timelines and budgets.

Her more pressing concern involves the economic impact during the AI infrastructure development phase. Given that consumer activity accounts for 70% of U.S. economic output, she observes AI beginning to subtly erode white-collar employment opportunities.

She emphasized that corporations are already implementing hiring freezes for recent college graduates — a demographic that has fueled consumer spending momentum over the past three decades.

“Markets have fully incorporated optimistic scenarios while largely overlooking potential downsides,” she explained.

Middle-class consumers, who generate the majority of spending growth, are already shifting toward more economical alternatives. Insurance premiums and other substantial expenses are accelerating faster for this demographic segment.

Subramanian further observed that long-term growth projections for the S&P 500 have reached levels unseen since the 1980s, which she characterized as “somewhat peculiar.”

Technical Analysis Points to Multi-Stage Decline

From a technical perspective, Paul Ciana, Bank of America’s Global Head of Technical Strategy, shares this cautious outlook.

Ciana has warned that the S&P 500 may decline through three distinct phases — a formation known as a “three-wave correction” — potentially reaching a low of 6,850.

E-Mini S&P 500 Sep 26 (ES=F)
E-Mini S&P 500 Sep 26 (ES=F)

This scenario would translate to approximately an 8.5% decline from present market levels.

He cautioned that should the index advance toward 7,741, it might constitute a “bull trap” — a deceptive upward breakout that swiftly reverses course.

Ciana characterizes current price behavior as “overextended” and advises investors to adopt defensive positioning throughout the July-September period.

Bank of America confirmed its 2026 S&P 500 price objective of 7,100 earlier this week. This represents Wall Street’s most pessimistic forecast and suggests roughly 5% downside from current trading levels.

The financial institution pointed to diminishing liquidity conditions, reduced share repurchase activity, and declining institutional appetite as justifications for their conservative stance.

BofA’s Recommended Investment Approach

Notwithstanding the pessimistic market view, Subramanian identifies promising opportunities in alternative market segments. She noted that every sector is experiencing earnings expansion this year.

Her preference leans toward large-cap value equities — especially within energy, financial services, and manufacturing industries. These sectors continue to provide attractive dividend yields and robust buyback programs.

She also views semiconductor companies as presenting a more straightforward investment thesis compared to hyperscale cloud providers, as chipmakers are recipients of AI-related capital spending rather than allocators of it.

Should new equity offerings continue their upward trajectory alongside rising long-term interest rates, she cautions this combination could precipitate a more widespread market decline.

The post BofA Forecasts 8.5% Decline in S&P 500 — Key Factors Behind the Bearish Outlook appeared first on Blockonomi.

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