US Stock Pricing at Extreme

Bull/Bear Market Indicator
Stock Market Pricing Indicator

The gauge on the left indicates bull or bear market status, and the one on the right reflects stock market valuation levels. Stock market pricing indicates whether stocks are cheap or expensive relative to earnings, but it is a poor indicator of market timing. We do not recommend selling stocks because the market valuation is high. Still, we would advise investors to be circumspect about adding new positions without carefully investigating the underlying value.

Bull/Bear Market

The Bull/Bear indicator remains at 40%, warning of a bear market ahead.

Bull-Bear Market Indicator

Updates to three market indicators (highlighted in orange) are delayed because of the US government shutdown.

The Chicago Fed National Index of Financial Conditions dropped to -0.559 on October 10, indicating a return to pandemic-era loose monetary conditions. NFCI values above zero indicate monetary tightening, while values below signal loose financial conditions.

Chicago Fed National Financial Conditions Index

Stock Pricing

Stock pricing increased to 98.45 percent, compared to a high of 98.56 percent two weeks ago, and an April low of 95.04 percent. The extreme reading warns that stocks are at long-term risk of a significant drawdown.

Stock Market Value Indicator

We use z-scores to measure each indicator’s current position relative to its history, with the result expressed in standard deviations from the mean. We then calculate an average for the five readings and convert that to a percentile. The higher that stock market pricing is relative to its historical mean, the greater the risk of a sharp drawdown.

Robert Shiller’s CAPE measure reached 39.20 this week, the highest ever recorded outside of the Dotcom bubble in 1999-2000.

S&P 500 CAPE

CAPE compares the S&P 500 index to a 10-year average of inflation-adjusted earnings.

Conclusion

The bull-bear indicator at 40% warns of a bear market ahead, while extreme pricing increases the long-term risk of a significant drawdown.

Acknowledgments

Notes

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