The Stock Market Is Doing Something Witnessed Only 3 Times in 154 Years — and History Makes Clear What Happens Next


For more than two years, the stock market has been virtually unstoppable. Last year, the iconic Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJINDICES: ^DJI), broad-based S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC), and innovation-inspired Nasdaq Composite (NASDAQINDEX: ^IXIC) galloped higher by 13%, 23%, and 29%, respectively, with all three indexes notching multiple record-closing highs.

Investors haven’t needed to dig too deeply to locate the catalysts fueling this extended rally in equities. In no particular order, the powder keg of the current bull market includes:

  • The rise of artificial intelligence (AI).

  • Better-than-expected corporate earnings.

  • A pullback in the prevailing rate of inflation from a four-decade high.

  • A resilient U.S. economy.

  • The return of Donald Trump to the White House.

  • Investor euphoria surrounding stock splits.

While nothing has slowed this bull market rally, history has often shown that when things seem too good to be true, they usually are.

A person drawing an arrow to and circling the bottom of a steep decline in a stock chart.
Image source: Getty Images.

At any given time, there is bound to be a data point, metric, or forecasting tool that spells potential trouble for the U.S. economy and/or Wall Street. Some of the more recent examples include the first notable year-over-year decline in U.S. M2 money supply since the Great Depression, as well as the longest yield-curve inversion on record.

But among the “what if”s for the stock market, none screams louder than a valuation tool that’s making history for only the third time in 154 years.

As the old idiom states, “value is in the eye of the beholder.” Value is a relatively subjective term, and what one investor considers to be pricey might be viewed as a bargain by another.

The traditional valuation tool on Wall Street is the price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio, which divides a company’s share price into its trailing-12-month earnings. While the P/E ratio is a quick value-comparison tool for mature businesses, it doesn’t work particularly well with growth stocks and can get easily skewed during turbulent events, such as the COVID-19 pandemic.

A considerably more comprehensive valuation tool that allows for apples-to-apples comparisons is the S&P 500’s Shiller P/E Ratio, which is also referred to as the cyclically adjusted P/E Ratio, or CAPE Ratio. The Shiller P/E is based on average inflation-adjusted earnings from the previous 10 years, which means that shock events won’t be able to skew its readings.

S&P 500 Shiller CAPE Ratio Chart
S&P 500 Shiller CAPE Ratio data by YCharts.

When the closing bell rang on Feb. 5, the S&P 500’s Shiller P/E crossed the finish line with a reading of 38.23. For context, the average reading for the Shiller P/E when back-tested to January 1871 is just 17.2.


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