Updated February 17, 2015
The recent volatility in the stock market has come as shock to many investors, however, looking at historical data, we shouldn't really be all that surprised.
The recent volatility in the stock market has come as shock to many investors, however, looking at historical data, we shouldn't really be all that surprised.
Back in 2000, Yale
Professor Robert Shiller, co-creator of the widely quoted Case-Shiller U.S.
Home Price Index, wrote a book called Irrational Exuberance. In the book,
he used a data set consisting of monthly stock prices, dividends and earnings
to ascertain whether or not the stock market is overvalued compared to
historical levels. The data which goes back all the way to 1874 and which
is available here, is used to calculate the Cyclically
Adjusted Price Earnings Ratio (CAPE or PE 10 Ratio). There are currently
just over 1720 data points in the set. Dr. Shiller uses monthly dividend
and earnings data that are computed from the S&P four-quarter totals for
each quarter since 1926 which are then linearly extrapolated to month figures.
Stock price data is the monthly average of closing prices. CAPE
is defined as the stock price divided by the moving average of ten years of
earnings corrected for inflation using the Consumer Price Index.
Higher than average CAPE values have a tendency to mean that average
long-term annual returns will be lower and lower than average CAPE values have
a tendency to mean that average long-term annual returns will be lower than
average.
Here is a graph showing
the entirety of the dataset:
Since 1881, the CAPE
ratio has averaged 16.57. On January 13, 2015, the CAPE
ratio stood at 27.60, 66.6 percent above the cyclically adjusted 133 year average. The bump in 2000 is a result of the technology stock frenzy when traditional valuations went out the door in the "new electronic economy". We all know how that story ended, don't we?
Let's take a closer look
at the CAPE ratio in the "modern era" from 1970 to the present (and
yes, I know that I'm randomly picking a year):
Over the 45 year
timeframe, the average CAPE ratio was 19.48. The current CAPE ratio of
27.60 is still 41.7 percent above the cyclically adjusted 45 year average CAPE.
A brief look at Dr.
Shiller's Cyclically Adjusted Price Earnings Ratio data would certainly suggest
that the September 2014 stock market was overbought when compared to historical
levels. With this in mind, the current correction should not have been a
shock to investors who were piling into the stock market in a rabid search for a
decent return on their savings, thanks in large part to Mr. Bernanke and Ms. Yellen and their unshakeable belief in their zero interest rate policy.
"Higher than average CAPE values have a tendency to mean that average long-term annual returns will be lower and lower than average CAPE values have a tendency to mean that average long-term annual returns will be lower than average."
ReplyDeleteHmmm.
Gregory,
ReplyDeleteThanks. I read it a few times to try to make sense of it!!!!
Paul