Goldman Sachs boosts S&P 500 price target

The headquarters of Goldman Sachs is pictured on April 17, 2019 in New York City.

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Strategists at Goldman Sachs on Thursday lifted their S&P 500 targets for both this year and next, citing better-than-expected earnings and lower-than-expected interest rates.

The investment bank lifted its year-end S&P 500 SPX, -0.46% target to 4,700 from 4,300 — implying a 7% advance to the end of 2021 — and moved its 2022 target to 4,900 from 4,600.

Strategists led by David Kostin point out that earnings per share growth has accounted for all of the major index’s 17% return this year.

“In the near term, we expect upward revisions to EPS estimates and declining concerns about the delta variant spread to drive equity upside, but the path of the virus and its economic impact have proven difficult to predict,” said the strategists.

Any surprise business or regulatory developments for tech giants Apple AAPL, -0.28%, Microsoft MSFT, -0.21%, Amazon AMZN, -0.34%, Alphabet GOOGL, -0.37% and Facebook FB, +2.19% — 23% of the S&P 500’s market cap — could limit upside, they added.

They also expect a narrower version of President Joe Biden’s proposed tax plan to pass Congress.

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