Hussman Weekly Market Comment: Declaring Victory at Halftime
Last
week, the S&P 500 came within 1% of reprising a syndrome that we’ve
characterized as a Who’s Who of Awful Times to Invest, featuring a Shiller P/E
over 18 (S&P 500 divided by the 10-year average of inflation-adjusted
earnings), the S&P 500 more than 50% above its 4-year low and 8% above its
52-week smoothing, investment advisory bulls (Investors Intelligence) over 47%
with bears below 27%, and Treasury bond yields higher than 6 months earlier.
This combination is one of numerous and nearly equivalent ways of defining an
“overvalued, overbought, overbullish, rising-yields” syndrome. While there are
certainly numerous conditions that are informative about stock market returns,
and capture a much broader set of negative market outcomes, I don’t know of any
other syndrome of market conditions – however defined – that has been so
consistently hostile for stocks over the past century.