US Market Snapshot

Bull/Bear Market Indicator
Stock Market Pricing Indicator

The gauge on the left indicates whether the market is in a bull or bear phase, and the indicator on the right reflects the current valuation of the stock market. Stock market pricing indicates whether stocks are cheap or expensive in relation to earnings, but it is a poor indicator of market timing. We do not recommend selling stocks because market valuations are high; however, we recommend exercising caution when adding new positions.

Bull/Bear Market

The Bull/Bear indicator remains at 40%, warning of a bear market ahead, with three of five indicators signaling risk-off.

US Bull-Bear Market Indicator

The Chicago Fed National Financial Conditions Index declined to -0.465 on April 10. A rise above -0.40 would signal risk-off, confirming bear signals from Fed monetary policy (rate-cut cycle) and the University of Michigan Index of Current Economic Conditions.

Chicago Fed National Financial Conditions Index

Stock Pricing

Stock pricing continued its sharp rise, reaching 95.97 percent from 91.79 percent two weeks ago.

We replaced the S&P 500 Price-to-Sales ratio and Forward Price-Earnings Ratio with similar series for the Dow Jones Industrial Index, but use a 20% trimmed mean with the new series. The trimmed mean excludes the top 10% and bottom 10% of readings to minimize distortion from outliers in the smaller population of 30 stocks.

US Stock Market Value Indicator

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

Robert Shiller’s CAPE compares the S&P 500 to its 10-year average of inflation-adjusted earnings. The ratio rebounded to 39.07, almost 75% above its long-term mean of 22.38.

S&P 500 CAPE
The S&P 500 measured against the highest trailing earnings, increased to 25.7 from 23.7 two weeks ago as stocks rallied, a 49% premium relative to its long-term mean of 17.3.

S&P 500 PE of Highest Trailing Earnings

Conclusion

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

Acknowledgments

Notes

Leave a Reply