No Result
View All Result
Global Finances Daily
  • Alternative Investments
  • Crypto
  • Financial Markets
  • Investments
  • Lifestyle
  • Protection
  • Retirement
  • Savings
  • Work & Careers
No Result
View All Result
  • Alternative Investments
  • Crypto
  • Financial Markets
  • Investments
  • Lifestyle
  • Protection
  • Retirement
  • Savings
  • Work & Careers
  • Login
Global Finances Daily
No Result
View All Result
Home Crypto

JPMorgan sees S&P 500 vulnerable as Brent tops $110

March 19, 2026
in Crypto
0
JPMorgan sees S&P 500 vulnerable as Brent tops $110



JPMorgan cuts its S&P 500 target and warns investors are dangerously complacent about Iran war risks, oil above $110, and the hit to growth, earnings, and stocks.

Summary

  • JPMorgan trims its year-end S&P 500 target from 7,500 to 7,200, arguing markets are making a high-risk bet on a quick Middle East resolution.
  • With Brent crude above $110 and shut-ins near record levels, the bank warns each sustained 10% oil rise can shave 15–20 bps from GDP and cut S&P earnings 2–5%.
  • Strategists say a deeper selloff could push the S&P 500 below its 200-day moving average toward 6,000–6,200 as demand destruction and wealth effects bite.

JPMorgan became the latest — and most prominent — Wall Street institution to sound the alarm on Thursday, cutting its year-end S&P 500 price target from 7,500 to 7,200 and warning that equity markets are making a “high-risk assumption” by pricing in a quick resolution to the Middle East conflict. The downgrade, issued as Iranian strikes on Gulf energy infrastructure sent Brent crude surging above $110 per barrel, signals a growing conviction among institutional analysts that the war’s economic fallout has been systematically underpriced.

“We believe the market is pricing in a quick end to the Middle East conflict and reopening of the Strait, giving a low probability to a potential demand hit,” JPMorgan wrote in its note. “This is a high-risk assumption given that S&P 500 and oil correlations typically turn increasingly more negative after a ~30% oil spike.”​

Oil prices have surged more than 46% since the U.S. and Israel launched their initial strikes on Iran, yet the S&P 500 has fallen less than 4% — a divergence that JPMorgan’s strategists view as a sign of dangerous market complacency rather than genuine resilience. While high-risk segments such as software stocks, South Korean equities, and crypto have sold off, broad equity positioning has barely shifted, with investors hedging rather than derisking in earnest.​

The bank’s core warning centers not on inflation — the conventional oil shock narrative — but on demand destruction. JPMorgan argues that if the supply disruption persists, “GDP, demand, and revenues will adjust lower through forced demand destruction.” The bank estimates that each sustained 10% increase in oil prices shaves 15 to 20 basis points off GDP growth. If Brent holds near $110, consensus S&P 500 earnings estimates could fall by 2 to 5%.

The structural supply picture compounds the concern. Oil supply shut-ins have already climbed to 8 million barrels per day — the highest on record — and JPMorgan warned that cuts could reach 12 million barrels per day, equivalent to roughly 11% of global production.​

JPMorgan Private Bank strategists Joe Seydl and Kriti Gupta laid out the transmission mechanism in stark terms earlier this week: oil sustained above $90 per barrel risks a 10–15% correction in the S&P 500, with international and emerging markets facing even larger spillover losses due to their higher sensitivity to global growth shocks. At $120 oil, the selling could intensify materially.

The wealth effect adds a secondary channel. With U.S. households holding over $56 trillion in stocks and mutual funds, a sustained equity drawdown would feed back into consumer spending — JPMorgan estimates a 10% drop in the S&P 500 could reduce U.S. consumer spending by approximately 1%. “The combined impact of persistently high oil prices and a bear market in the S&P 500 has a detrimental effect on demand, significantly amplifying the negative impact on growth,” the bank concluded.​

If the S&P 500 selloff extends below the 200-day moving average near 6,600, the bank said meaningful support may not emerge until the 6,000–6,200 range. For now, with the war entering a dangerous new energy-infrastructure phase and no diplomatic off-ramp in sight, JPMorgan’s revised target may prove optimistic rather than cautious.

Editorial Team

Editorial Team

Related Posts

Kalshi doubles valuation to $22 billion with new $1 billion raise
Crypto

Kalshi doubles valuation to $22 billion with new $1 billion raise

March 19, 2026
Solana
Crypto

A Major Solana Milestone: US SEC’s Latest Filing Puts SOL In The Commodity Category

March 19, 2026
SEC Interpretation on Crypto Laws ‘a Beginning, Not an End,‘ Says Atkins
Crypto

SEC Interpretation on Crypto Laws ‘a Beginning, Not an End,‘ Says Atkins

March 19, 2026
With Trump's Greenland plan stalled and WLFI price volatility and macroeconomic uncertainty, XRPstaking offers a more robust asset participation path
Crypto

Trump pressures Powell to cut rates as Fed holds line on inflation

March 19, 2026
Apyx expands Strategy’s STRC stake to $29M, targets top-holder position
Crypto

Apyx expands Strategy’s STRC stake to $29M, targets top-holder position

March 19, 2026
California Court Dismisses Coinbase User's Challenge to IRS
Crypto

California Court Dismisses Coinbase User’s Challenge to IRS

March 19, 2026
Load More
Next Post
In My Experience, This $460 Bidet Is Worth Every Single Penny

In My Experience, This $460 Bidet Is Worth Every Single Penny

Popular News

  • Josh Garber

    How to Contact Hilton Customer Service

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • BlockFi Customers Lose Battle To Recover $300 Million, U.S. Judge Says

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The 10 best banks for college students in 2025

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • The ‘Magnificent Seven’ is now the ‘Lag 7.’ How Big Tech’s slump is dragging down the S&P 500.

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0
  • Everything You Can Do With Google’s Nano Banana 2 Image Generator

    0 shares
    Share 0 Tweet 0

Latest News

In My Experience, This $460 Bidet Is Worth Every Single Penny

In My Experience, This $460 Bidet Is Worth Every Single Penny

March 19, 2026
0

We may earn a commission from links on this page. Ever since I came home from a trip to Japan...

JPMorgan sees S&P 500 vulnerable as Brent tops $110

JPMorgan sees S&P 500 vulnerable as Brent tops $110

March 19, 2026
0

JPMorgan cuts its S&P 500 target and warns investors are dangerously complacent about Iran war risks, oil above $110, and...

I opened a 0% credit card to pay $11,000 in vacation debt. What could go wrong? Quite a lot, it seems.

I opened a 0% credit card to pay $11,000 in vacation debt. What could go wrong? Quite a lot, it seems.

March 19, 2026
0

“We’ve been aggressively paying down our credit cards.”

Kalshi doubles valuation to $22 billion with new $1 billion raise

Kalshi doubles valuation to $22 billion with new $1 billion raise

March 19, 2026
0

Kalshi has raised more than $1 billion at a $22 billion valuation in a new financing round led by Coatue...

Global Finances Daily

Welcome to Global Finances Daily, your go-to source for all things finance. Our mission is to provide our readers with valuable information and insights to help them achieve their financial goals and secure their financial future.

Subscribe

  • About Us
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Editorial Process

© 2025 All Rights Reserved - Global Finances Daily.

No Result
View All Result
  • Alternative Investments
  • Crypto
  • Financial Markets
  • Investments
  • Lifestyle
  • Protection
  • Retirement
  • Savings
  • Work & Careers

© 2025 All Rights Reserved - Global Finances Daily.

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.