You’re heading into 2026 with one of the biggest banks on Wall Street telling you the economy can run stronger than most people expect. Bank of America’s Global Research team used its December 2025 outlook to stake out a clearly bullish position on next year’s growth, especially in the United States.
In that report, the bank says it forecasts stronger‑than‑expected economic growth in 2026, explicitly calling its stance more optimistic than consensus. Senior U.S. economist Aditya Bhave pins U.S. real GDP growth at 2.4% on a fourth‑quarter‑over‑fourth‑quarter basis, versus a broader forecast pack clustered closer to the low‑2% range.
Candace Browning, head of BofA Global Research, summed up the tone, saying the team “remains bullish on the economy and AI,” and is “optimistic on the two most influential economies, expecting above‑consensus GDP growth for the U.S. and China.” That message quickly jumped from press releases into social media, with WatcherGuru posting on X that “Bank of America projects ‘strong’ economic growth in 2026,” giving retail traders a simple headline to latch onto.
To understand what this means for your money, you have to look past the adjective and into the numbers. BofA’s 2.4% U.S. growth forecast may sound modest, but relative to fears of a stall‑out or recession, it’s a vote of confidence that the expansion still has legs.
Bhave’s team doesn’t stop at 2026. The outlook keeps U.S. growth at roughly 2.2% in 2027, signaling that the bank sees a long, grinding expansion rather than a short‑lived burst. On the global side, BofA lifts its China forecast to about 4.7% GDP growth in 2026 and 4.5% in 2027, citing better‑than‑expected trade and support from domestic policy as key reasons.
Those macro assumptions feed directly into how the bank thinks markets behave. In U.S. equities, its strategists project roughly 14% earnings‑per‑share growth for S&P 500 companies in 2026 but only 4–5% upside in the index level, targeting a year‑end S&P 500 around 7,100. That combination (strong earnings, modest index gains) suggests a world where the economy is doing its job, but valuations are already rich enough that you can’t count on big multiple expansion to juice returns.
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