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Wells Fargo Lifts S&P 500 Target To 7,950 On Iran Deal

Published Jun 16, 2026
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Summary:
  • Wells Fargo raised its S&P 500 year-end target to 7,950 from 7,300, roughly 5% above where stocks closed Monday.
  • The upgrade hinges on the US-Iran peace deal reopening the Strait of Hormuz, which analyst Ohsung Kwon says will push oil lower and keep the Fed on the sidelines.
  • Key risks include a historical pattern of 10-plus percent S&P drops in midterm election second halves and potential political pressure on the AI sector.

Wells Fargo just lifted its year-end S&P 500 target to 7,950, up from 7,300 and about 5% above where stocks closed Monday. The new target sits among the most bullish calls on Wall Street right now and assumes the rally has another leg left before year-end.

The reason isn't earnings - it's the deal.

The Setup

The US and Iran sign their interim peace deal in Switzerland on Friday, ending months of fighting. The deal also reopens the Strait of Hormuz, the chokepoint that handles roughly a fifth of the world's oil shipments.

Wells Fargo analyst Ohsung Kwon says lower oil means lower inflation, which keeps the Fed out of the way. Energy costs flow into nearly everything from shipping to gas at the pump.

A steady drop in crude takes pressure off the broader price picture and lifts margins for airlines, transports, and consumer companies. That clears the runway for stocks to run higher.

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The AI Reset

Kwon also sees room for chip stocks to rally.

Mood in the Nasdaq 100 has gone from hot to "firmly neutral," and that reset matters. It means the easy money has left, giving the trade space to move higher without overheating.

His picks are semiconductors and cyclicals - companies that do well when the economy is growing. Cyclicals are due for a catch-up rally now that the war is ending and growth fears are fading.

The bigger bet sitting underneath the call is on the Fed. Wells Fargo thinks Kevin Warsh, the new Fed chair, won't fight inflation by hiking rates, which is a "run it hot" approach that puts growth first.

If they're right, stocks - especially growth-heavy ones like chips - are the best place to park money over the next year.

Risks Wells Fargo Flagged

Kwon laid out his own risks, and they aren't small.

The S&P has dropped more than 10% in the second half of midterm election years 71% of the time, and the next midterms are right around the corner. That kind of pattern is hard to shake, even with a peace deal as a tailwind.

The other risk is AI itself. Voters like AI less than they like ICE, making it an easy political target.

If Washington starts talking about slowing AI down, the sector that's carried the market this past year takes a hit. And the bull case Wells Fargo is leaning on leans heavily on chips and tech.

What To Watch

Friday's signing is the trigger. If it happens, oil keeps falling and the AI trade gets a green light.

If the deal falls apart, the whole bull case looks shaky and the 7,950 target goes with it.

Brent crude and chip ETFs will be the first signals - both have already moved on early reports of the deal coming together.

Wells Fargo is betting peace holds.

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