Stock Market Looks Expensive Now

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Note: All data refers specifically to the S&P500 (SPY) or the Wilshire 5,000 (VTI)

Below are eight different quantitve valuation metrics for the US equity market.

First a primer:

We are sometimes asked what is the point of measuring the stock marketStock Market Looks Expensive Nowvaluation, we clarified why I started this monthly piece below. Additionally,  Steven Romick of FPA compares the Shiller PE to the ten yr treasury yield to measure market valuations. So there is at least one great investor out there who finds it useful.

You can view extensive European market valuations (including country valuations) here.

We started this monthly market valuation series in December 2009. We were getting tired of hearing that the market was overvalued because P/E TTM was 87. Earnings were clearly lowered by the worst economic crash since the great depression. However, the question was how to value the market from a purely quantitative methodology, while ignoring all the outside noise and macro predictions of where the economy is headed. We looked for several different metrics to evaluate the market which over time have proven to be effective and decided to look at all the metrics, instead of just focusing on the last 12 months of earnings.

We were contemplating only updating the valuations on a quarterly basis, since why is there a need every month? However, since the market was and in general continues to be quite volatile, we consider it useful to evaluate on a monthly basis. When volatility truly gets to lower levels, it will suffice to update these series on a quarterly basis.

 

The current level of the S&P500 is 1,370, and the Dow is at 12,978 — a slight increase from last month.

The point of this article is to measure the stock market based on seven different metrics. As stated above, this article does not look at the macro picture and try to predict where the economy is headed.

We collaborate with two colleagues for some data presented, Doug Short of Dshort, and Josh of Multipl. Both are great sites, and we encourage readers to check them out.

As always, we must mention that just because the market is over or undervalued does not mean that future returns will be high or low. From the mid to late 1990s the market was extremely overvalued and equities kept increasing year after year. In addition, individual stocks can be found that will outperform or underperform the market regardless of current valuations. However, as we note at the end of the articlewe expect low returns for the overall market, over the next 10 years based on current valuations when the metrics revert towards their mean.

Below are different market valuation metrics as of March 2nd, 2011:

The current P/E TTM is 15.0, a slight increase from last month (this specific number is from February 29th close).

Stock Market Looks Expensive Now

This data comes from 0ur colleague Doug Short of dshort.com.

Based on this data the market is fairly valued. However, we do not think this is a fair way of valuing the market since it does not account for cyclical peaks or downturns. To get an accurate picture of whether the market is fair valued based on P/E ratio it is more accurate to take several years of earnings.

Numbers from Previous Market Lows:

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Shiller PE

 Chart

The current ten-year P/E is 22.88; a slight increase from  PE of 22.47 from the previous month. This number is based on Robert Shiller’s data evaluating the average inflation-adjusted earnings from the previous 10 years.

The Shiller PE is calculated using the four steps below:

  • Look at the yearly earning of the S&P 500 for each of the past ten years.
  • Adjust these earnings for inflation, using the CPI (ie: quote each earnings figure in 2011 dollars)
  • Average these values (ie: add them up and divide by ten), giving us e10.
  • Then take the current Price of the S&P 500 and divide by e10.

The common criticism of Shiller’s method is that it includes years like 2008 and 2009 when earnings were awful. Howeverwe would argue that it is balanced out by the bubble years of 05-07. Additionally the Shiller PE (with the exception of 1995-2000, where the stock market reached absurd valuations) has been a much better indicator of market bottoms and tops than PE TTM. Two recent examples:in March 2009, the Shiller PE was at 13, while PE TTM was at . At the market top in October 2007, the Shiller PE was at a very high level of 27.31, while the PE TTM was only at 20.68.

The AAII put together the best criticism of the Shiller PE, which I have seen to date.

Below are the main points:

  • Following the Graham-Dodd recommendation, Shiller uses a 10-year moving average of earnings in computing the CAPE. According to data compiled by the National Bureau of Economic Research, economic contractions have become shorter and expansions longer in recent years. Measured peak to peak, the average is five years and six months.
  • In determining the CAPE (Shiller PE), reported earnings are adjusted for inflation using the Consumer Price Index, where real values reflect current-period purchasing power. However Shiller uses data going back to 1871, when inflation was measured differently than today. There is an approximate 7% difference in the annual CPI inflation rate based on methodological changes over the last couple of decades.
  • Tax codes have changed considerably since 1871. You can read further discussion of this issue above.

The criticisms are fair, and we do believe Shiller takes a more cautious approach to market valuations (Shiller can be described as a bit too cautious and overshoots on valuations). While Shiller’s method is by no means perfect, we think it is still a valid and the best method of market valuation for the following reasons.

  • The 10-year Shiller PE shows markets overvalued by about 43% (at time of the article) and using a 6 year (as suggest by the AAII) business cycle the market is still overvalued by 35%. This is not a large difference to completely throw out Shiller’s methodology.
  • Differences in inflation may effect the Shiller PE, but they would only have a small effect, especially if you decrease the earning duration. Also they should apply to any PE (TTM, six-year P/E, or forward P/E).
  • Same point with accounting changes. Accounting changes would also effect P/B or ANY metric that is used to value the market, this is not limited to Shiller PE.
  • Shiller PE has proved to be a good market valuation indicator. Shiller stated on February 22nd, 2009, that based on CAPE equities were cheap for the first time in decades. That was only two weeks before one of the biggest bull market rallies in history.

Below is some further data showing how accurate the Shiller PE has been in predicting future market returns. First how has Shiller PE been in terms of predicting future returns in the past:

In conclusion to the argument about using CAPE, I would say that the Shiller PE despite slight flaws is a great metric for predicting future long term returns of the market.

Robert Shiller stated in an interview that he believes the S&P500 will be at 1430 in 2020. Shiller believes that based on his metric the market is overvalued, and will offer subpar returns over the next 10 years. However Shiller noted in another more recent interview that the market is not too overvalued, as it has been over the past year. He also noted the ultra low interest rates, which make equities much more attractive. Shiller expects real returns of several percent a year, although below the 7% real return, which the market has historically returned.

 

Stock Market Best Possible Lucky Most Likely Unlucky Worst Possible
10-Year Percentage Returns 8.08 5.08 2.08 -0.92 -3.92
20-Year Percentage Returns 7.27 5.27 3.27 1.27 -0.73
30-Year Percentage Returns 8.16 7.16 6.16 5.16 4.16
40-Year Percentage Returns 7.15 6.25 5.35 4.35 3.35
50-Year Percentage Returns 7.18 6.38 5.58 4.88 4.18
60-Year Percentage Returns 7.65 7.00 6.35 5.75 5.15

Based on ValueWalk columnist, Rob Bennett’s market return calculator, the return of the market should be 2.08% annually over the next ten years under the mostly likely scenario.

Rob states:
This new calculator tells you what return you can reasonably expect at various time-periods from an investment in the S&P stock index, presuming that stocks perform in the future much as they have in the past. The results are expressed in terms of real, annualized total (that is, with dividends reinvested and without additions or subtractions to principal) returns.
Mean: 16.41

Median: 15.80

Min: 4.78 (Dec 1920)

Max: 44.20 (Dec 1999)

Numbers from Previous Market lows:

Mar 2009 13.32
Mar 2003 21.32
Oct 1990 14.82
Nov1987 13.59
Aug 1982 6.64
Oct 1974 8.29
Oct 1966 18.83
Oct 1957 14.15
June 1949 9.07
April 1942 8.54
Mar 1938 12.38
Feb 1933 7.83
July 1932 5.84
Aug 1921 5.16
Dec 1917 6.41
Oct 1914 10.61
Nov 1907 10.59
Nov 1903 16.04

Doug Short thinks the Shiller’s numbers are a bit inaccurate because the number used above does not include the past several months of earnings, nor revisions. Doug calculates P/E 10 at 21.9.

 

Data and chart courtesy of [multpl.com]

Current P/BV 2.00

We thought the metric would be great for figuring out market returns because as Tweedy Browne and David Dreman demonstrate through extensive research, a basket of the lowest P/B stocks over long periods of time dramatically outperforms the market. It therefore would make sense that the P/B metric would be useful for evaluating the market itself in terms of over-valuation or undervaluation.

Horizon Asset management used the same numbers for P/B provided by Standard and Poors and come up with a whopping 3.68% (for April 2011), according to the same numbers that we usedwe came up with a number closer to 2.0 at the time and as did many other including Barron’s. Since, the vast majority seem to conclude similar numbers to mine I will go with that figure over Horizon’s. The number that I used, I obtained using data from Barron’s, and updated using the latest change in the price of SPY. I am not sure where Horizon got their data from; no one else has measured close to that level.

In regards to historic data there is very little on P/B, besides the fact that the average 2.41 over the past 30 years.  Book value is considered a better measure of valuation than earnings by many investors including legendary investor Martin Whitman. He states that book value is harder to fudge than earnings (although book value can easily be distorted). In addition book value is less affected by economic cycles than one year earnings are. P/BV therefore provides a longer term accurate picture of a company’s value, than a TTM P/E. I will continue my search for P/B numbers.

Current Dividend Yield 1.93

 

S&P 500 Dividend Yield Chart

 

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The current dividend yield of the S&P is 1.93. This number is slightly lower than 1.97 from last month. The number although far below its long term average, is attractive compared to the 10-year Treasury, which is currently yielding an ultra low 1.99%. Recently as another flight to ‘safety’ has occurred, Treasury yields have gone down, and the stock market has declined, pushing up the dividend yield.

10 Year Treasury Rate Chart

For attractive yield check out my recent article about Australian debt-https://www.valuewalk.com/bonds/high-yield-low-risk-look-to-australia/. Austria has started to cut interest rates, as we predicted in the article and the thesis seems to be playing out nicely.

It is hard to determine on this basis whether the market is overpriced. The dividend yield for stocks was much higher in the begging of this century than the later half. The dividend yield on the S&P fell below the yield on 10-Year treasuries for the first time in 1958, after the flight to safety when Lehman Brothers collapsed, it did so again recently, due to fears of another worldwide recession.

Many analysts in 1958 argued that the market was overpriced and the dividend yield should be higher than bond yields to compensate for stock market risk. For the next 50 years the dividend yield remained below the treasury yield and the market rallied significantly, until recently. In addition the dividend yield has been below 3% since the early 1990s. While I personally favor individual stocks with high dividend yields, the current tax code makes it far favorable for companies to retain earnings than to pay out dividends.

Finally, as we noted above the current economic environment has zero percent interest rates and low bond yields. During periods where yields are low it is logical for income oriented investors hungry for yield to be bid up the market, and dividend yields to decrease. We think it is hard to claim that the market is overbought based on the low dividend yield.

Mean: 4.34%

Median: 4.28%

Min: 1.11% (Aug 2000)

Max: 13.84% (Jun 1932)

Numbers from Previous Market lows:

Mar 2009 3.60
Mar 2003 1.92
Oct 1990 3.88
Nov1987 3.58
Aug 1982 6.24
Oct 1974 5.17
Oct 1966 3.73
Oct 1957 4.29
Jun 1949 7.30
Apr 1942 8.67
Mar 1938 7.57
Feb 1933 7.84
July 1932 12.57
Aug 1921 7.44
Dec 1917 10.15
Oct 1914 5.60
Nov 1907 7.04
Nov 1903 5.57

Data and chart courtesy of [multpl.com]

Market cap to GDP is currently 95.7%, which is slightly higher than the 94.4% level from last month.

 

Ratio = Total Market Cap / GDP Valuation
Ratio < 50% Significantly Undervalued
50% < Ratio < 75% Modestly Undervalued
75% < Ratio < 90% Fair Valued
90% < Ratio < 115% Modestly Overvalued
Ratio > 115% Significantly Overvalued
Where are we today (03/03/2012)? Ratio = 95.7%, Modestly Overvalued

According to Barron’s the ratio got as low as 40% in the late 1940s, when investors feared another depression, and in the inflationary 1970s.In his 2001 Fortune magazine article, Warren Buffett used the ratio of the market value of all US publicly traded securities to Gross National Product (GNP) as a yardstick to measure the stock market valuation. He stated that ”The ratio has certain limitations in telling you what you need to know. Still, it is probably the best single measure of where valuations stand at any given moment”. He further went on to say ”If the percentage relationship falls to the 70% or 80% area, buying stocks is likely to work very well for you. If the ratio approaches 200%–as it did in 1999 and a part of 2000–you are playing with fire”.

We can see that, during the past four decades, the TMC/GNP ratio has varied significantly. The lowest point was about 35% in the previous deep recession of 1982, while the highest point was 148% during the tech bubble in 2000. The market went from extremely undervalued in 1982 to extremely overvalued in 2000.

According to Barron’s the ratio got as low as 40% in the late 1940s, when investors feared another depression, and in the inflationary 1970s.

Historic Data:

Min 35% in 1982

Max 148% in 2000.

Data and charts courtesy of Gurufocus.com


Current Tobin’s Q 0.94 unchanged from last month. 

Note from dshort: The next quarterly Flow of Funds report, on which the Q Ratio is base, will be released at noon on March 8th. I’ll update this commentary later that afternoon. The data below is current through the end of January. Since the underlying Fed data is so stale and the new release so close, I’m skipping my usual end-of-month extrapolation.

 

 

As can be seen from the above charts, the market is over-valued based on tobins Q. The market would have to fall 33 or 44% to be fairly valued.

What is Tobins Q?

Here is a brief explanation from http://www.investopedia.com:

A ratio devised by James Tobin of Yale University, Nobel laureate in economics, who hypothesized that the combined market value of all the companies on the stock market should be about equal to their replacement costs. The Q ratio is calculated as the market value of a company divided by the replacement value of the firm’s assets:

 

Investopedia explains Q Ratio (Tobin’s Q Ratio)
For example, a low Q (between 0 and 1) means that the cost to replace a firm’s assets is greater than the value of itsstockStock Market Looks Expensive Now. This implies that the stock is undervalued. Conversely, a high Q (greater than 1) implies that a firm’s stock is more expensive than the replacement cost of its assets, which implies that the stock is overvalued. This measure of stock valuation is the driving factor behind investment decisions in Tobin’s model.

 

As can be seen from the above charts, the market is  over-valued based on tobins Q. The data comes from Doug Short. This is the most accurate data that is available. It is impossible for the data to be 100% precise because the Federal Reserve releases data related to Tobin’s Q on a quarterly basis. The best that can be done is to extrapolate the data and try to provide the most accurate data possible based on the change in the Willshire 5000. This is what we and Doud did to get the current number. This method has proven extremely accurate for calculating Tobins Q on any given day.

 

The current level of 0.94 compares with the Tobin’s Q’s average over several decades of data of approximately .72. This would indicate that the market is extremely overvalued.

In the past Tobin’s Q has been a good indicator of future market movements. In 1920 the number was at a low of .30; the next nine years included phenomenal gains for the market. In 2000 Tobin’s Q almost reached a record high of nearly 2, and the market declined subsequently about 50% by 2003.

Historic Tobins Q:

Previous market bottoms. Data courtesy of Doug of dshort.com:

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Market High 1929: 1.06 (This is not the highest number ever reached, just the number reached before the 1929 crash.)

Average historic Tobin’s Q .72 (source: Stocks for the Long Run by Jeremy Siegel)

Sometimes market sentiment is the best way to measure future returns. Usually when the retail investor is bullish it is a contrarian sign to be fearful, and when they are bearish it is a sign to be bullish. The sentiment has proven remarkably accurate, the numbers below from previous market bottoms confirm this fact. For example in 2009, 70% of investors were bearish. The broad stock market is up ~100% since then.

One reader pointed out the following interesting point about Tobins Q:

The idea behind Tobin’s Q is interesting but a modern complexity relates to the amount of money spent on R&D. It seems clear to me that the investment in many products is in proprietary technology and not in manufacturing facilities. Look at Amgen, Apple, Intel or Microsoft. Fabless Semi’s for instance. Most valuation techniques would give you a way to adjust accounting values for the R&D. I really think Tobin’s Q would be more valuable if the amount of research that had been accomplished in the last decade could be included. It may then provide a better valuation measure for modern times. A good rule of thumb may taken from Intel and how it bottoms at 2 x book. Maybe the value of its R&D is 2 x book or for for the market, 2 x Tobin’s Q. I don’t think Tobin’s Q adjusts for research although I haven’t read the techniques in a while.

 

AAII-Investors Bullish

According to the AAII, “the AAII Investor Sentiment Survey measures the percentage of individual investors who are bullish, bearish, and neutral on the stock market for the next six months; individuals are polled from the ranks of the AAII membership on a weekly basis. Only one vote per member is accepted in each weekly voting period.”

AAII sentiment survey data from 2/29/2012http://www.aaii.com/sentimentsurvey:

44.5% Bullish
28.7% Neutral
26.8% Bearish

Individual investors are slightly too bullish and slightly less bearish than the long term average, which is a contrarian indicator of a over priced stock market.

Long-Term Average:

Bullish: 39%
Neutral: 31%
Bearish: 30%

Sentiment Survey Past Results

Reported Date Bullish Neutral Bearish
March 1: 44.51% 28.66% 26.83%
February 23: 43.69% 28.80% 27.51%
February 16: 42.71% 30.65% 26.63%
February 9: 51.64% 28.17% 20.19%
February 2: 43.81% 31.12% 25.08%
January 26: 48.40% 32.69% 18.91%
January 19: 47.23% 29.15% 23.62%
January 12: 49.14% 33.68% 17.18%
January 5: 48.88% 33.96% 17.16%
December 29: 40.60% 28.57% 30.83%
December 22: 33.73% 38.04% 28.24%
December 15: 40.19% 26.17% 33.64%
December 8: 38.57% 26.67% 34.76%
December 1: 33.04% 27.54% 39.42%
November 24: 32.72% 29.01% 38.27%
November 17: 41.94% 27.02% 31.05%
November 10: 44.74% 30.70% 24.56%
November 3: 40.18% 30.21% 29.62%
October 27: 43.00% 32.00% 25.00%
October 20: 35.99% 29.41% 34.60%
October 13: 39.77% 23.86% 36.36%
October 6: 35.24% 19.05% 45.71%

For all historic data on the AAII survey back to 1987 click on the following link:http://www.aaii.com/sentimentsurvey/sent_results.

Table 1. Historical Averages & Extremes of AAII Member Sentiment*
Average Median StandardDeviation Extremes
Max Min
(%) (Date) (%) (Date)
Bullish 38.8% 38.0% 11.3% 75.0% 1/6/2000 12.0% 11/16/1990
Neutral 33.4% 34.0% 8.6% 62.0% 6/3/1988 7.9% 12/14/2000,6/19/2003
Bearish 27.9% 27.0% 9.2% 67.0% 10/19/2000 6.0% 8/21/1987
[i]*data covers period from July 24, 1987 to September 2, 2004.[/i]

We see the historical extremes for bullish, bearish, and neutral sentiment. Bullish sentiment reached its highest levels on Jan. 6, 2000 — the height of the tech bubble — at 75.0%. Levels of extreme bullishness — if viewed as a contrarian indicator — would lead one to believe that a market decline is in the wings, and vice versa.

Bullish Neutral Bearish

March 2009 18.92% 10.81% 70.27%

March 2003 34.3% 14.30% 51.40%

Oct. 1990 13.00% 20.00% 67.00%

Nov. 1987 31.0% 41.00% 28.00%

Average 39.00% 31.00% 30.00%

Max 75.00% 62.00% 70.00%

Min 12.00% 8.00% 6.00%

GMO data:

GMO

GMO forecasts the returns for the next seven years for various asset class. GMO is getting increasingly bullish on severalasset classes. However most asset classes will have lower returns than their historic real rates of return as shown below. Furthermore, only high quality and foreign stocks are expected to be good performers.
Jeremy Grantham of GMO pegged fair value of the S&P500 at 950, which is ~30%, below current levels. John Hussman stated in his weekly commentary that a 25% drop in the market would not surprise him.

Furthermore, Hussman recently predictedthat the S&P should have real returns of close to 4.4% a year. This would be below the long term real average of 7%, but still an attractive return. However Hussman also noted that profit margins are at historic levels which is inflating earnings, therefore it is hard to expect 5% annual returns. He also noted that the Shiller PE is above 22 and indicates strong headwinds.

 

 

John Hussman’s track record from GuruFocus.com:

Performance of Hussman Strategic Growth Fund

Year Return (%) S&P500 (%) Excess Gain (%)
2010 -3.62 15.1 -18.7
2009 4.63 26.5 -21.9
2008 -9.02 -37 28.0
2007 4.16 5.61 -1.5
2006 3.51 15.79 -12.3
5-Year Cumulative -1.1 12.2 -13.3
2005 5.71 4.91 0.8
2004 5.16 12 -6.8
2003 21.08 28.7 -7.6
2002 14.02 -22.1 36.1
2001 14.67 -11.9 26.6
10-Year Cumulative 74.1 16.4 57.7
2000 16.4 -9.1 25.5

To Recap

1. P/E (TTM) – Undervalued15.0 fairly valued

2. P/E 10 year – overvalued 22.88 very overvalued

3. P/BV – Undervalued – 2.0

4. Dividend Yield  1.93%– Indeterminate overvalued, but very attractive compared to treasuries: 1.99%

5. Market value relative to GDP – modestly over-valued 95.7

6. Tobin’s Q – Overvalued 0.94 Very overvalued

7. AAII Sentiment – Investors are too bullish

8. GMO – Stocks are slightly over-valued

In conclusion, the market is looking overvalued again based on the metrics used. Tobin’s Q, AAII, Market Cap to GDP, GMO metrics and Shiller P/E indicate that valuations are too high.

The historical data fails to take into account current record low interest rates. We know that not many investors take issue with our inclusion of interest rates in the equation. However, we think that investors should look at the stock/bond alternative. Right now you can get SPY with dividend yields close to the 10-year Treasury yield.

However, eventually the market will likely returns to normal valuation ratios as interest rates reach more normal levels. We believe returns over the next 10 years will be sub-par (below the 9.5% nominal average market return). We think we will likely see real annual returns in the mid single digits over the coming decade.

You can read more about our predictions in the following two articles:

What Will The S&P 500 Return Over The Next 10 Years Part I

What Will The S&P 500 Return Over The Next 10 Years Part II

Note: We have received numerous suggestions on how to improve our monthly series. I tried to incorporate these ideas in my current article. Please leave a comment if you would like to provide further suggestions.

Stay tuned until the beginning of next month for the next monthly valuation article.

Valuing Wall Street: Protecting Wealth in Turbulent Markets by Andrew Smithers. The book explains in detail how tobin’s Q is calculated.

Wall Street Revalued: Imperfect Markets and Inept Central Bankers. A more recent book by Andrew Smithers.

Irrational Exuberance by Robert Shiller. Great book by the man who calculates the P/E 10 ratio himself; Robert Shiller. The book is written in 2000, right before the tech bubble crash. Shiller correctly predicts the crash. Shiller also accurately predicted the housing bubble.

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