The Long View: Not a Straight Line

Key Takeaways

  • Although markets often pause to digest after large gains, history suggests these episodes usually prove fleeting, meaning major indexes could move higher in the second half of 2026.
  • Several economic clouds receded last quarter with the labor market turning the corner and oil prices returning to pre-conflict levels. Combined with the strong overall green signal from the ClearBridge Recession Dashboard, we believe the U.S. economy remains on solid footing.
  • While the S&P 500 has been in a higher valuation regime since the pandemic, earnings strength has single-handedly powered the market rally, a trend we believe will continue.

Market Overview

At times, the stock market’s climb brings to mind the trek to Everest Base Camp: even though the destination is higher than the starting point, the path is not a simple steady climb. In Nepal, trekkers gain elevation, descend into valleys, and then climb again. They repeat this pattern many times, which is why the total vertical climb is almost double the difference in elevation between the trailhead and Base Camp.

Markets work in a similar way, with a journey higher that often includes pullbacks, rallies and pauses along the way. Just as a trekker must accept the switchbacks, descents and acclimatization stops required to reach Base Camp, investors too must recognize that volatility is not an interruption of the journey but part of the path forward.

Encouragingly, the market appears to have already begun an acclimatization period, with the S&P 500 Index holding roughly flat over the past six weeks. Even so, the index delivered a 14.9% price return for the quarter, its 12th strongest quarterly gain since 1950. The market has typically advanced further following past similarly sharp rallies, averaging gains of 5.5% over the next three months and 10.4% over the next six. Although markets often pause to digest or even correct after large gains, history suggests these episodes usually prove fleeting, meaning that major indexes could move higher in the second half of 2026, bolstered by the easing of several economic overhangs in recent weeks (Exhibit 1).

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