The stock market has had an outstanding five year run and, as such, I believe many individual investors have misguided expectations. With that said, however, the market is overvalued, over-believed and over-margined yet I am not arguing to get out but rather to be aware of where we are and to temper your expectations for the future. To help with that assessment a number of charts from various authorities are included showing different ways to look at valuations for today’s U.S. stock market and my estimates of forward-looking returns on total U.S equity portfolios.
So says Steve Blumenthal (cmgwealth.com) in edited excerpts from this article entitled On My Radar.
On My Radar this week I look at:
- Valuations
- The first chart shows median PE to be 21.5 (price times earnings) on April 30, 2015. The 51 year average median PE is 16.8.
- the Median Fair Value (taking current earnings times 16.8) is a S&P 500 level of 1627.24. The market is at 2121 today and was at 2085.51 at April month end.
- Overvalued is measured at a 1 standard deviation move above Fair Value or S&P 500 level 2128. We are a long way away from undervalued or S&P 500 level 1126.29.
- The next chart looks at S&P 500 PE based on (normalized earnings). The current reading is 20.3…
- PE has been above 16.5 about 30.7 percent of the time since 1927 and over that time period the return averaged -0.5% when PE of 16.5 or higher.
- We are in a high valuation = low return zone. Stocks are richly priced.
- This next chart is said to be Warren Buffett’s favorite valuation measure and shows the stock market capitalization as a percentage of gross domestic income. (Simply take the total number of shares outstanding times price and compare that to U.S. gross domestic income.)
- You can see that we are at a higher level than we were at the market peak in 2007. Only March 2000 was higher. The charts shows the market to be in “bubble territory”.
- This dashboard is pretty cool. I see a lot of red.
- The first chart shows median PE to be 21.5 (price times earnings) on April 30, 2015. The 51 year average median PE is 16.8.
- Forward Returns
- This next chart breaks median PE into five quintiles. The idea here is to divide all data points of PE since 1984 into quintiles and then see what the 10-year return was if your starting point was at any point in a given quintile.
- Quintile 1 is best (lowest 20% of PEs) and Quintile 5 is the most expensive (highest 20% of PEs). If an investor bought in when the market was inexpensively priced in Quintile 1, the annual return over the subsequent 10-year period averaged 15.91%.
- Conversely, if you bought in at any time median PE was in Quintile 5, the annual return over the subsequent 10-year period averaged 2.94% (note this is before inflation).
- The next chart looks at stocks as a percentage of total household equity ownership and tracks the subsequent 10-year return based on just how much equity individuals owned as a percentage of their total financial assets.
- The idea here is that when investors have fully committed to the stock market, most of the money is in the game – having already bid up prices. When low, most of the money is out of the game creating buying power that ultimately comes back in to drive prices higher.
- In short, the current data is telling us to expect returns over the next ten years of just 2.25%. Note the high correlation coefficient since 1952.
- This next chart breaks median PE into five quintiles. The idea here is to divide all data points of PE since 1984 into quintiles and then see what the 10-year return was if your starting point was at any point in a given quintile.
- Don’t Fight the Tape or the Fed
- In my view, so much hinges on the Fed and the overall market trend. I post this next chart from time to time in Trade Signals. It has been steadily deteriorating and while not yet at a -2 reading, it is just one step away. “It’s all ‘bout that Fed ‘bout that Fed”…
- Trade Signals
- I mentioned the following in Wednesday’s post
- Cyclical Equity Market Trend: The Primary Trend Remains Bullish for Stocks
- Volume Demand Continues to Better Volume Supply: Bullish for Stocks
- The Zweig Bond Model: The Cyclical Trend for Bonds is Bearish Weekly Investor Sentiment Indicator:
- NDR Crowd Sentiment Poll: Neutral Optimism (short-term Neutral for stocks)
- Daily Trading Sentiment Composite: Neutral Signal (short-term Neutral for stocks though nearing Excessive Optimism which would turn the indicator Bearish)
- Recession Watch – My Favorite Recession Forecasting Chart: Currently signaling No Recession
- Click here for the full piece including charts.
Concluding Thoughts
- I mentioned the following in Wednesday’s post
- We are in an environment that favors a focus on absolute returns instead of relative returns. The problem is that the markets are doing their best to throw us a head fake and like 2000 and 2008, investors are biting on the move. Don’t bite on the head fake!The reality is that valuation metrics are very poor at predicting a market peak. Don’t Fight the Fed remains in place and there are better ways to more accurately risk manage the market turning points. I’m a big fan of NDR’s Big Mo (for momentum), yet nothing is perfect. Fortunately, there are ways to inexpensively hedge that doesn’t require perfect.
- What we can do is fairly accurately predict forward 5- and 10-year returns. Here too, not perfectly but we can get pretty darn close. With the market richly priced, forward returns just don’t look good enough. Worth the risk? I think it’s better to have a game plan in place that enables you to capitalize on the next major market correction – which in my opinion could be in the -40% to -60% range.
- Recessions tend to happen once or twice in a decade. The Fed and the global central banks are in play but the Fed is nearing a change in plan. Play defense until a better opportunity presents.
- There are a number of things that can drive the market higher than we might imagine: a rush of foreign capital into U.S. assets driven from negative interest rates and a loss of confidence in government and bank safety in Europe. I think it’s a probable maybe. How’s that for confidence? It could happen.
Stephen B. Blumenthal
Chairman & CEO
CMG Capital Management Group, Inc.