Stocks Are OvervaluedÉOr Maybe Not
As a follow up to our recent blog entry, Ò2016 Market ReviewÓ (insert blog link), some friends recently asked me about current stock market valuation levels. In the following chart, we see that several major stock market indices surged to new all-time highs in 2016 (Some indices have moved even higher in 2017).
The Question: Is the stock market overvalued?
Given U.S. stocks have produced one of the more robust and
unexpected market rallies in recent years, the media has predictably followed
with a host of articles about how the market is now ÒovervaluedÓ (A term that implies stocks have
gotten ahead of themselves and are due for a fall). This is a constant theme in the media
whenever the market is climbing upward, and it never fails to stoke fear in
investors that a downturn is looming. A quick Google search on this subject is instructive Ð because it
shows such articles appearing every year going back to the 2008-09 bear market (There
were even articles arguing that stocks were overvalued at the DowÕs low point
of 6,627 in March 2009!).
As many of you know, we are not in the business of forecasting and instead use logic as well as an evidenced-based investment approach at our firm. For example, if we dive deeper into the data on the S&P 500 Index (which focuses on larger domestic companies), it doesnÕt appear based on the following chart that stocks are overvalued in the U.S. as some talking heads claim (albeit expected return may be lower in the near-term for this area of the market but not necessarily negative).
S&P 500 VALUATION
When
investment managers assert that the market is overvalued, the extension of this
logic is that investors should do
something to diminish the risk to their portfolios by reducing stock
exposure, or even exiting stocks entirely. Our advice is that investors should stick
to their financial planning strategy and make decisions based on the ability to
meet their specific goals and objectives.
In most client scenarios following large market movements, we apply modest rebalancing to manage risk and donÕt make dramatic portfolio changes unless something has changed with our clientsÕ needs and circumstances.
However, for those investors already retired or planning on full retirement in the next five years or less, your situation may be different. If this applies to you, it would be wise to seek advice on what the right level of stock market exposure is for your investment portfolio so you can best manage sequence of return risk and ensure sustainable lifetime income. For others still working and accumulating savings, other factors such as taxes and costs will play a critical role when it comes to making important investment decisions.
Our Beliefs and the
Media
One of the central tenets of investment success is
maintaining a sense of faith in the future Ð holding fast to the belief that
the overall state of humanity is improving. From an investment perspective, it
stands to reason that businesses, being collections of people, will both be the
catalyst for, and beneficiaries of, this state of perpetual improvement and
future stock returns will therefore reflect these improvements.
At this point, we suspect there are many reading this blog who
are either shaking their heads or rolling their eyes Ð or maybe both Ð at the
notion that Òthings are improving.Ó After all, when we are bombarded daily with
constant examples of how things are going terribly wrong in the world, how can
anyone assert that things are getting better?
A fascinating article we ran across recently entitled ÒWhy
are we so determined to deny that things are getting better?Ó (https://capx.co/why-are-we-determined-to-deny-that-things-are-getting-better/) highlights
the disconnect between what we perceive to be reality versus what is, in fact,
reality. the article, author Johan Norberg notes that, despite dramatic
reductions in violent crime, poverty and infant mortality around the globe,
most people still perceive things to be getting worse instead of better. Mr.
Norberg attributes much of this skewed perspective to the saturation of
negative news stories in the media and the instantaneous availability of those
stories via smart phones. He noted one particular study in which people in the
U.K. and U.S. were asked about their beliefs about global poverty and how far
removed their beliefs were from reality:
To bring all of this back to an investment perspective:
Investors who embrace a negative world view tend to manifest that belief in
their investment decisions, becoming overly cautious in their desire to hold
riskier assets like stocks even when their age and financial goals dictate the need
for such assets. It is therefore important not to let anecdotal examples in the
media Ð however jarring those examples may be Ð drive us toward an overly
cautious approach to investing that will only serve to diminish our financial
wellbeing in the future.
We appreciate our relationship with you and as always we are here to help.
Best,
Marc