BUSINESS

Why a top strategist is sticking with his call for stocks to surge 22% even as the trade war roils markets

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  • Craig Johnson isn’t deterred from his bullish S&P 500 call despite soaring market volatility.

  • The Piper Sandler strategist said he still expects the S&P 500 to surge to 6,600 by year-end.

  • “When people are vomiting up stocks, you gotta be in there cleaning it up,” Johnson said.

In the aftermath of President Donald Trump’s “Liberation Day,” one strategist on Wall Street was unmoved.

The stock market had just experienced its worst two-day sell-off since March 2020, when the global economy was on the verge of shutting down due to the COVID-19 pandemic.

With the S&P 500 down more than 10% in two trading sessions, predictions of worst-case scenarios washed over Wall Street. Strategists across various Wall Street banks warned of an imminent recession and lower stock market returns due to Trump’s sky-high tariffs.

But Craig Johnson, chief market technician at Piper Sandler, saw this as an opportune time to reiterate his view that the S&P 500 would finish the year at a fresh record high of 6,600.

That represents a potential upside of 22% from levels on Friday afternoon.

“Don’t stop believin” was the title of Johnson’s note to clients, reiterating his bullishness on the stock market despite the elevated volatility from Trump’s trade tariffs.

Business Insider caught up with Johnson this week to better understand why he’s sticking with one of the highest price targets on Wall Street.

For one, Johnson was quick to point out that “it’s only April,”and that there is plenty of time for the stock market to digest the recent losses, consolidate, and then move higher.

“I feel like let’s give this market a little bit of time,” Johnson said. “There’s a lot of volatility and if we’re going to start to see a more rational trade environment coming into play, then certainly multiples in this market can come back and the expectations of earnings cuts might not be as high as what people were trying to price into it.”

Johnson’s positive view, which hinges on the Trump administration back-pedaling some of its tariff initiatives, played out on Wednesday when Trump instituted a 90-day pause on “reciprocal” tariffs for most countries.

The stock market boomed about 10% following that announcement.

“We just put up one of the best days post World War II in the market and I don’t think anybody was expecting to move that large, but at the end of the day, there’s probably still more room for this market to ultimately I think work to the upside,” Johnson said.


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