Friday, August 25, 2017

Bubble
News

Opinion: U.S. stock valuations haven’t been this extreme since 1929 and 2000

Here’s how the authors put it: “A decision to allocate to a passive S&P 500 index is to say that you are ignoring what we believe is the most important determinant of long-term returns: valuation. At this point, you are no longer entitled to refer to yourself as an investor. You may call yourself a speculator, but not an investor. 
“Going passive eliminates the ability of an active investor to underweight the most egregiously overpriced securities in the index (we obviously prefer a valuation-based approach for stock selection as well). When faced with the third most expensive US equity market of all time, maintaining a normal weight in a passive index seems to us to be a decision that will likely be very costly. Yet despite this, it remains a popular path, with around 30% of all assets in the U.S. equity market in the hands of passive indexers.”
Basically, GMO thinks that U.S. stocks over the coming seven years will lose 6% due to P/E multiple contraction, and another 2.8% from margin contraction. 
While dividend yield and profit gains will contribute 5% to stock returns,, that still amounts to a real total return of -3.9% for the period.
 DYI:
Valuation insanity continues to prevail I want to point out a possible strategy – this is NOT investment advice, simply educational info for you to digest – of moving to a short position equal to the only undervalued industry precious metals mining companies. Please note markets can and have in the past remained irrational far longer than a short position can preserve its principal.  Just thought I’d pass that on.
DYI

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