
After years of being the sidekick to growth names, value stocks are poised to shine in 2026.
Investors who have grown wary of stretched valuations in artificial intelligence and technology giants are increasingly turning toward cheaper, less risky assets.
Recent market action suggests the rotation is already underway, with value indices outperforming growth benchmarks in the final weeks of 2025.
Portfolio managers argue that the conditions for a sustained rebound are in place, setting the stage for value to reclaim leadership in the coming year.
One of the most encouraging signs for value investors is the widening breadth of the rally.
Instead of gains concentrated in a handful of mega-cap technology firms, December saw financials, industrials, and consumer names drive indexes higher.
The equal-weighted S&P 500 has even surpassed its cap-weighted counterpart, underscoring the strength of smaller and mid-sized companies.
“A lot has kind of changed over the last few weeks,” said Justin Bergner of Gabelli Funds, noting that the environment now favors a rotation into undervalued sectors.
This broadening leadership suggests the bull market is not reliant on a narrow group of hyperscalers anymore, but rather supported by diverse participation across industries.
Macroeconomic conditions also appear favorable for the value’s resurgence. If the Fed begins cutting interest rates in early 2026, borrowing costs will ease for banks and consumer-facing businesses.
At the same time, productivity gains from artificial intelligence could lift corporate earnings across sectors that have not yet benefited from the AI boom.
Tax relief from Trump’s “One, Big, Beautiful Bill Act” adds another layer of support.
Dennis DeBusschere of 22V Research wrote that stronger productivity growth allows the economy to expand “at 2.5% real without inflation being a problem,” creating a tailwind for value-oriented strategies.
Together, these factors could unlock earnings growth for companies long overlooked by investors chasing tech.
While value stocks are attractively priced, investors must remain discerning.
Small caps, for instance, trade at a steep discount to large caps, but cheapness alone does not guarantee outperformance.
Phil Segner of the Leuthold Grizzly Short Fund cautioned, “We use valuations not as a timing tool, but more as a risk profile for the index.”
In other words, lower valuations reduce risk but do not ensure gains. The challenge for 2026 will be identifying which companies can translate favorable conditions into stronger profits.
Banks and consumer discretionary firms are among the sectors highlighted by strategists, but even within these sectors, careful stock selection will be critical as the rotation unfolds.
This will ensure investors capture genuine opportunities in the new year (2026) instead of chasing every bargain that appears somewhat undervalued.
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