Top Dollar for Top DollarGiven the S&P 500 looks short-term oversold, you may be thinking about defending this level. You may even be right, but be mindful where we are in context of historically reliable valuation measures that that put alternatives like the forward P/E ratio and the Fed Model to shame. pic.twitter.com/RCjTRDwlJq
— John P. Hussman, Ph.D. (@hussmanjp) February 22, 2022
Chart by John Hussman, blue annotations by Mish
Why is it so hard to accept that speculative bubbles can burst? Interest rates were driven to zero for a decade. Yield-starved investors chased stocks to valuations beyond the 1929 and 2000 extremes. That speculation front-loaded more than a decade of future market gains into the present. Those gains are now behind us, embedded in breathtaking multiples. If history is any guide, a collapse in valuations is likely to return those gains to the future. For now, the market continues to be in a “trap door” situation. Our gauges of market internals remain unfavorable, and valuations remain obscene. The market capitalization of non-financial and financial corporate equities hit $67 trillion at the recent peak. That’s a lot of stock market capitalization. The ratio of U.S. market cap/GDP began 2022 at a record extreme of 2.82, compared with a multiple of 1.88 at the 2000 bubble peak, and a historical norm of just 0.78. When you look at market capitalization, recognize that as much as 72% of it may be air. That is the hazard.Hussman provides over 20 charts. It's not important to understand them all. The key chart is "You are Here". Hussman also goes into a discussion of the "Fed Put" that is the Fed will cushion the decline. OK, at what level? 50% at best as Grantham believes or something lower? Higher? Why? "As much as 72% of market capitalization may be air." I have morphed into Grantham, but perhaps not quite Hussman. But like Hussman, I expect to be mocked for this post. Previously I called stocks grossly overvalued. But then I thought it was possible for the excess to resolve by stocks going nowhere for long periods of time or by smaller declines that add up to a huge decline over times. Now I am thinking in terms of a multi-year crash. Grantham's target of 2500 as a minimum decline on the S&P 500 seems about right. No Escape Is the any escape? In aggregate no. For every seller there is a buyer. In this case a buy the dipper. Someone must hold every stock every step of the way down, and pension funds will do just that. Individually, investors have a choice. You can cash out, lighten up, or try to buy value. Grantham discusses this in the interview video as well. But most won't. It is extremely difficult to believe what Grantham is saying, what Hussman is saying, and what I am saying. Japanese Nikkei
Japanese Nikkei stock market index courtesy of StockCharts.Com, Annotations by Mish
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