Please ensure Javascript is enabled for purposes of website accessibility Are Earnings Broadening Beyond the Magnificent 7?
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Are earnings broadening beyond the magnificent 7?

Are earnings broadening beyond the magnificent 7?

Tech stocks have outperformed the rest of the S&P 500 for several years, and while we expect earnings growth among these companies to continue in 2026, we see another encouraging trend emerging. Earnings across the rest of the market are on an upward path too — and are set to contribute more to earnings growth for the S&P 500 Index in 2026 than the Magnificent 7.


In the third quarter, the Magnificent 7 stocks contributed 4.1% to the S&P 500’s year-over-year earnings growth compared to more than double that, or 9.4%, from the rest of the index. Beyond the third quarter, the Magnificent 7 stocks are expected to trail the earnings growth contribution from the rest of the market for all of 2025. Earnings are broadening beyond tech, and they are on track to continue this path in 2026 — a positive sign in our view.

What’s behind this shift? Productivity and profitability among all sectors have been improving on the heels of AI technology advancements, lower borrowing costs and business-friendly regulatory and policy provisions set by this year’s tax and spending bill. These factors should support upward earnings momentum in 2026 across the S&P 500.

In fact, consensus expectations are for the index’s earnings to grow 14% next year with 5.4% of that growth coming from the Magnificent 7 and 8.9% from the rest of the market. This is in line with our 10-15% earnings target for 2026 as well as our view that the broadening trend will strengthen further in the upcoming months.  

CONTENIDO RELACIONADO
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Rising earnings estimates continue to support equities despite geopolitical and macroeconomic uncertainty. With profit growth broadening across S&P 500 industries, resilient corporate earnings underpin our constructive outlook for the stock market.

Global momentum in manufacturing
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April PMIs (Purchasing Managers’ Indices) point to a meaningful improvement in global manufacturing momentum, with the U.S., Eurozone and Japan all posting stronger-than-expected and firmly expansionary results. The breadth of the rebound suggests improving global demand, supporting a constructive outlook for growth despite ongoing geopolitical tensions.

Tracking the margin uptrend
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Rising margin expectations continue to support equities, underscoring the resilience of corporate profitability in the face of last year’s tariffs and this year’s Middle East war. The U.S. remains especially strong compared to peers, though first quarter earnings will be an important test.

 Time to buy tech?
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Technology valuations have meaningfully declined over the past year, but the sector continues to stand out for its strong earnings growth and relative resilience. While near-term uncertainty remains, tech still appears well positioned as a key driver of broader market growth.

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