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S&P 500 Target Raised to 7,900 — RBC Sees Up to +10% More Upside Led by Big Tech

RBC Capital Markets raised its S&P 500 year-end target to 7,900 (+7.7% from current levels) and projects up to +10% upside over the next 12 months, as the U.S. economy shifts into a "two-speed" structure with Big Tech single-handedly driving index gains.

Daniel Kim··5 min read
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AIKey Summary
  • RBC Capital Markets raised its S&P 500 target to 7,900, implying +7.7% upside and up to +10% over 12 months
  • Big Tech is seen as the sole index driver, though a U.S
  • recession would invalidate the entire bull case

+7.7% from current levels, up to +10% over the next 12 months… Big Tech is the sole driver in a "two-speed economy."


RBC Capital Markets raised its S&P 500 year-end price target to 7,900 on May 8, representing approximately 7.7% upside from current levels. The firm also outlined the potential for an additional 10% gain over the next 12 months.

The prior target set at the start of the year was 7,750. The revision reflects progress in U.S.-China tariff negotiations and better-than-expected Q1 earnings from Big Tech. The S&P 500 has already rallied 12.4% year-to-date in 2026.


The "Two-Speed Economy" Scenario

RBC diagnosed the U.S. economy as shifting into a "two-speed economy" structure. The technology and AI sectors continue to expand at an accelerated pace, while consumer staples and traditional industries lag behind — creating a widening bifurcation.

Within this dynamic, RBC sees Big Tech playing the pivotal role of carrying the entire S&P 500 index.

Index gains are no longer the result of a broad economic recovery. Big Tech is running on its own track, pulling the index forward. Every other sector is moving at a different speed.

RBC Capital Markets (paraphrased)

Prerequisites for Upside and Key Risks

RBC explicitly noted that the path higher will not be linear.

  • Pullbacks of 5–10% are considered manageable and within the expected range
  • A U.S. recession, however, would invalidate the entire bull case
  • Escalating tariff concerns or a Federal Reserve policy misstep could serve as key triggers

This is fundamentally a conditional outlook. A Big Tech-only rally is inherently fragile — the moment Big Tech earnings disappoint, the entire index becomes vulnerable.


Key Individual Stock Views

RBC maintained a constructive stance on major Big Tech names.

  • Alphabet: Price target raised from $375 to $400, Outperform maintained
  • Shopify: Price target of $200, implying approximately 27% upside
  • Palantir: Rated Underperform with a $90 price target maintained (concerns over commercial segment growth)

Even within Big Tech, RBC draws clear distinctions. Alphabet and Shopify are viewed favorably, while Palantir carries a negative rating — consistent with Jefferies' recently reported $70 Sell target on the stock.


Perspective for International Investors

An S&P 500 target of 7,900 carries amplified implications when currency exposure is factored in. A +7.7% gain in U.S. equities translates directly into portfolio appreciation for investors holding U.S. stocks or ETFs — a meaningful tailwind for those with significant dollar-denominated exposure.

That said, under RBC's recession scenario, equity prices and currency rates could move adversely at the same time, creating a compounded risk. The key portfolio decision is whether to concentrate in a Big Tech-driven single-leg rally or to diversify across sectors and geographies.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What does a 'two-speed economy' mean?

It describes an economic structure where different sectors grow at vastly different rates. Currently, technology, AI, and semiconductors are expanding rapidly, while consumer staples, industrials, and traditional financials are stalling or slowing. RBC argues that in this environment, S&P 500 gains will be driven exclusively by Big Tech, with the rest of the market unable to keep pace — a deepening polarization.

What would an S&P 500 at 7,900 mean for investors holding U.S. equities?

A +7.7% gain in the S&P 500 would flow directly into portfolio appreciation for investors with U.S. stock or ETF exposure. Broad index ETFs such as SPY, VOO, and IVV would be expected to rise by a similar margin. However, if the dollar weakens, returns measured in local currency could be reduced — and under a recession scenario, both equity prices and exchange rates could turn unfavorable simultaneously, creating a dual-sided risk.

Why does RBC believe Big Tech is the sole driver of index gains?

The top 10 S&P 500 holdings by market cap account for roughly 35% of the index, and most are Big Tech names. In Q1, Alphabet, Meta, Microsoft, and Amazon all beat consensus estimates, with accelerating revenue growth supported by surging AI infrastructure capital expenditures. By contrast, consumer and industrial sectors are under margin pressure from tariff impacts and softening demand.

How likely is the recession scenario that would invalidate RBC's outlook?

Major Wall Street banks including Goldman Sachs and JPMorgan currently estimate recession probability in the 25–35% range. Near-term concerns include a softening labor market and rising consumer credit delinquencies, though the Federal Reserve retains room to cut rates as a policy buffer. RBC explicitly acknowledged this risk and framed its outlook as conditional on avoiding a downturn.

Why did RBC upgrade Alphabet but rate Palantir Underperform?

Alphabet was upgraded on the strength of stable growth across both its Search and Cloud businesses, along with improving margins from AI integration. Palantir, on the other hand, faces concern over its stretched valuation — trading at roughly 31x price-to-sales — and the risk that new competitors such as Anthropic could stall growth in its commercial segment. The divergence highlights RBC's stock-specific differentiation even within the Big Tech category.

Daniel Kim
Author

Daniel Kim

Doyun Kim is the Editor-in-Chief of Inteliview, focusing on macroeconomics and digital asset markets. His work emphasizes structural analysis over short-term narratives, interpreting market movements through capital flows, policy shifts, and underlying market dynamics. He specializes in combining data-driven insights with clear storytelling to deliver actionable perspectives for global audiences.

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