While many on Wall Street are bracing for a summer slowdown, our next guest predicts a massive power rally in July.
And as we keep an eye on geopolitics in the Middle East, can we expect lower energy prices this summer that triggered potential lower CPI prints while ahead of earning season.
All eyes do remain on the of course your price targets while joining us now with his bull market outlook is Jay Hatfield , CEO infrastructure Capital Advisors.
Wall Street, stock market, market outlook, Michael Reinking, New York Stock Exchange, NYSE, Dow Jones, S&P 500, Nasdaq, investing, stocks, equity markets, market rally, AI stocks, artificial intelligence, tech stocks, Alphabet, Google stock, earnings season, corporate earnings, Fed policy, Federal Reserve, interest rates, inflation, jobs report, nonfarm payrolls, labor market, unemployment rate, wage growth, market rotation, Jay, great to have you here.
Thank you so much for joining me.
Thanks, great to be on.
Well, here we are the final trading day of the first half of 2026 and what a volatile year it has been.
But at the same time we're looking at double digit percentage gains for the S&P 500 this quarter, the best quarter since 2020, and I understand that you have a bullish target for the S&P 500 for your end.
Yes, we're at 9000.
We started the year at 8000.
The reason we increased it was solely because earnings estimates have risen 12%.
So we're really in an earnings boom, not a stock price bubble, and most people haven't really acknowledged that.
The other thing is that even though it's a good quarter, June is always a bad month, and we hung in there pretty well during June.
So we're expecting a big rally in July, a broader based rally, not just cycling between chips and non-chips and.
War stocks and non-war stocks, so we kind of saw the beginnings of that yesterday.
It looks like today is a little bit broader rally.
So we're I think that the market is really giving good signs that we'll get to our 9000 target.
Well, that is quite the bullish target, so we'll see what happens in the second half of this year.
But of course I do want to get your take on inflation as well as oil, because if we look at the S&P 500, we know that energy is leading the way higher year to date, but you expect crude to fall even further.
So what are you expecting?
Yes, and I would note that we're almost certainly not going to get to 9000.
As crude goes lower, inflation goes lower, and we get some prospect of rate cuts, so it's a critical call.
We were more optimistic than most that oil prices would drop.
A lot of people were higher for longer.
That's not proven to be the case.
We think we'll go to 60.
The reason for that is very specific.
OPEC is producing, going to produce at maximum production.
Even Iran is going to be maximum production and also able to sell anywhere.
That's 32 million barrels.
That should drive the price to 60 and get the Fed on track for three cuts over the next year.
And you mentioned the Federal Reserve.
Of course there has been a changing of the guard at the head of the central bank, and tomorrow we will be listening for Wars's comments over in central Portugal.
But what are your expectations when it comes to the outlook for the central bank, especially since we have new leadership here?
We're super optimistic about.
Excuse me, we have been concerned because he had been a 2% target nut, but he loosened up the 2% target by saying left of the decimal.
It's a super confusing way of saying.
Maybe 2.5 is OK.
And then he also has given indications he's going to reform the terrible indices that the Fed relies on, which makes them about two years behind.
So we think the combination of those two things plus just good data that's likely to come out anyway because oil prices are coming down, tariffs coming off, shelter rolling down.
We'll set him up to make rate cuts but not jam the rate cuts like a lot of people thought, but to do rate cuts based on sound analysis.
So we're highly constructed by Wars.
I think that in retrospect he was a great choice.
And as we head into the second half of this year, it is the time of year to think about the new terms that have been added to our vocabulary as well as our lexicon, and I can think of lag 7 as well as apocalypse just given the action we have seen across sectors.
But I understand you have some picks in terms of stocks.
Some names that you think have been unfairly punished and might have further upside heading into the new year.
So what are they?
Well, what tends to happen in March and June, the month before the quarter starts, is hedge funds kind of take over and so they overdo all these trades.
They buy chips, sell the MG 7 or Mag 8 really with Broadcom.
And these trades get overdone and they don't care about valuation.
They don't care.
Oracle's at 15 times and Intel's at 78 times.
They only care about momentum, which makes sense because they lose their capital if they don't make money every month.
So we think that will reverse what it normally does during earnings.
So companies like Amazon, Broadcom.
Netflix is well hated right now that they'll get their day in the sun as the companies report earnings and the hedge funds have to cover, so we think those are good choices and also lower risk like Amazon doesn't really have that high a beta.
It's not like buying Micron on an uptick.
So we think those will do well and financials because the war is.
In the process of being ended, I guess.
Oil prices are coming down, rates are coming down, credit is fine.
So and you've seen that already in the last 2 or 3 weeks the financials have started to outperform.
Well, Jay, we will have to leave it there since we are fast approaching the market open here, but I look forward to speaking to you again soon.
Thank you so much for joining us.
Thank you.