11 Charts Exposing The Madness Of The Stock Market Crowd

Atle Willems, CFA profile picture
Atle Willems, CFA
663 Followers

Summary

  • There's more to stock market valuations than the current level of interest rates.
  • In this article, 11 charts are presented which expose the extraordinary level to which stock prices have dislocated from a range of economic aggregates.
  • The height of these charts should send shivers down the spine of anyone concerned with minimizing losses.

One of the very few good reasons left to buy equities now is historic low interest rates. Broadly speaking, this is not a recent phenomena as it has been the case, from a valuation standpoint applying a more "normal" level of interest rates, for at least the last three years. Many are not making decisions based on hopes and dreams are aware of this fact, but nonetheless maintain a relatively high allocation toward equities out of necessity.

The necessity of a decent return in this historic low interest rate environment has resulted in a desperate chase for yield, often motivated by the current spread between earnings and bond yields.

The chase for yield also demonstrates a lack of investment opportunities since newly printed money has acted more to drive up prices in the secondary market rather than fueling additions to capital goods. This has doubtlessly helped prolong the bull market in stocks as it has had a dampening effect on the business cycle.

But there is more to stock market valuations than the current level of interest rates. Further declines in nominal interest rates are limited, while the upside potential is tremendous in percentage terms. The best one can hope for is perhaps that rates remain near historical lows for a long period of time. Placing your bets solely on interest rates remaining low however requires a portion of delusion.

The nominator in any prudent appraisal of stock prices also matters, though it appears to play a minimal role these days as exposed in the charts below. Most of these charts have one thing in common - they compare stocks to a range of economic aggregates related to corporate sales and with it earnings. After all, earnings per share, no matter how "earnings" are calculated, cannot forever increase or even be maintained due to cost cutting and share repurchases alone.

This article was written by

Atle Willems, CFA profile picture
663 Followers
Atle Willems, author of "Money Cycles", is an analyst with Liabridge Economic Research. He holds a masters degree in finance with distinction from Nottingham University Business School and a BSc in Business Administration from Drake University.

Disclosure: I am/we are long MYY. I wrote this article myself, and it expresses my own opinions. I am not receiving compensation for it (other than from Seeking Alpha). I have no business relationship with any company whose stock is mentioned in this article.

Recommended For You

Comments (10)

To ensure this doesn’t happen in the future, please enable Javascript and cookies in your browser.
Is this happening to you frequently? Please report it on our feedback forum.
If you have an ad-blocker enabled you may be blocked from proceeding. Please disable your ad-blocker and refresh.