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One of the most bullish Wall Street strategists just offered one of the most bearish outlooks for 2016 we've read yet

Brian Belski
Brian Belski. Bloomberg TV

BMO Capital Markets' Brian Belski is preparing clients for a stock market correction sometime in 2016.

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"We believe the S&P 500 will likely suffer its first calendar year loss since 2008," Belski and his team wrote in their 2016 outlook note to clients on Wednesday.

He has a 2016 year-end target of 2,100 on the S&P 500, with an earnings-per-share target of $130.

On Wednesday, the index closed near 2,089.

Belski has long been one of the more bullish strategists on Wall Street. Indeed, he continues to reiterate his long-term thesis that the market is in the midst of a multiyear-long secular bull market.

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But he believes the coming year could hold one of several corrective phases that typically occur during bull markets.

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BMO Capital Markets

Stocks could correct because investors will get nervous, Belski said. He sees concerns about higher interest rates, low commodity prices, and growth slowdowns in China and Europe contributing to the uncertainty amid "the most doubted, second-guessed, and, frankly, hated stock market rally in history." Belski sees two scenarios for the year-end target playing out. The first is that investors push the S&P 500 up to records as high as 2,400, as they realize that the economy is neither too bad nor too good ("economic Goldilocks").

As earnings and the economy heat up faster than the market expects, however, the Federal Reserve would most likely become more dovish, spooking investors worried about higher rate and triggering a correction.

In the second scenario, the rate hike — most likely in December — would push investors to the sidelines initially. Stocks would recover slightly, but uncertainty amid an election year would take the S&P 500 up to 2,250 at best and 1,800 at worst.

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"In terms of portfolio construction, we believe investors should remain focused on growth in the first half of the year, but eventually shift to value in the second half of the year," Belski wrote. "We also favor high-quality large-cap stocks, with strong cash flow, earnings consistency, and brand power."

As for the long term, Belski and team believe that annualized stock-market returns will most likely be 8% to 10% on average over the next three to five years.

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