Investor Optimism Builds Into 2026 as Bullish Sentiment Climbs Sharply — Evening Brief – 01.02.26
Individual investors closed out 2025 with a renewed sense of optimism, brushing aside weeks of caution as market participants pivoted toward 2026. According to the latest American Association of Individual Investors (AAII) survey, bullish sentiment jumped to 42.0% for the week ended December 31, up from 37.4% the prior week—marking one of the largest week-over-week increases in the second half of the year.
At the same time, bearish sentiment fell sharply to 27.0%, down from 34.8%, signaling a meaningful retreat in pessimism. Neutral sentiment also inched higher to 31.0% from 27.8%, suggesting that more investors expect stability rather than volatility in the months ahead.
The shift in investor tone comes as U.S. equities put the finishing touches on a quietly successful year. The S&P 500 delivered 16.4% gains in 2025, powered by resilient corporate earnings, easing inflation pressures, and growing expectations that the Federal Reserve will shift more decisively toward rate cuts in 2026.
Still, the final trading week of the year told a more nuanced story. With the holidays compressing activity into a shortened schedule, markets saw thin trading volumes, tax-loss harvesting, and year-end rebalancing that kept major indexes subdued. A late-December pullback in mega-cap tech, which drove much of the year’s rally, also weighed on broader performance as investors reassessed valuations heading into the new year.
The AAII survey—closely watched as a contrarian indicator—suggests individual investors are entering 2026 with more confidence in the market’s trajectory despite lingering macro uncertainties. With the Fed signaling caution but acknowledging a softer labor market, and with corporate earnings expected to reaccelerate in the first half of the year, investors appear increasingly comfortable leaning into risk.
The key question now: whether bullish momentum will carry into the first quarter or if early-year data on employment, inflation, and corporate profits will shift the tone once again.


