Market Watch - January 10, 2024
We have recently been told by the Fed that because the economy is “relatively strong”, inflation
is receding, and interest rates are trending down, that things are getting better, and that 2024 will
be a good year for the economy.
Really?
Right now, the yield on the DJIA is less than 2% and the historical dividend yield is 4.1% (See
Chart). The current Dow Jones Industrial Average price earnings ratio is just over 30 times
earnings, way up from an average of 14.7 times the past 50-years. What does a yield of less than
2% and a price earnings ratio of less than 15 tell us about the price of the current market? It tells
us that the market is tremendously overpriced, almost double where the market should be priced
if it was selling at an average historical yield and price earnings ratio. Current valuations have
only been exceeded in December of 2020 and just before the 1929 crash.
DOW JONES DIVIDEND YIELD & PE RATIO STUDY |
|
DIJA, Based Upon Dividend Yield: |
|
DIVIDEND YIELD @ |
MARKET PRICE IS: |
2%
3
4
5 |
37,700 (Today)
25,100
18,500 (Average)
15,080 |
DIJA, Based Upon P/E Ratio: |
|
P/E RATIO @ |
MARKET PRICE IS: |
30 x
25
20
15
12 |
37,700 (Today)
31,400
25,000
18,500 (Average)
15,080 |
Let’s look at some basic problems and relate them to our economic outlook; and then examine
the possibility of a favorable stock market over the next several years. Wall Street firms are
predicting 10% annual returns over the next decade.
Assuming that is true, let’s analyze what has to be overcome before we can count on those 10% gains:
Influence of Other Economies
In addition to our own internal problems, there are serious problems around the world:
Current Position of Stock Markets
While many people think so, the stock market is not the economy; and conversely, the economy
is not the stock market. What the stock market tells us is the status of investor sentiment, coupled
with current company performances. That’s all. As mentioned above, a handful of huge tech
stocks control the flow of the world’s information.
Think of what could happen to the stock market: cash gets tighter and there is a sudden loss of
interest in the market coupled with the realization that tech stocks, along with the whole market,
are overvalued. That could follow disclosure that a significant number of illiquid banks are about
to fail, like the three times they have failed since the Nixon era. All of a sudden there is no one to
buy $5 billion a day in new government issued debt. Assume that because we have lost our AAA
Bond Rating that U.S. treasuries are going to come to market at a large premium like they did in
the 80s. Imagine the Dow going through the mean into PE ratios of 10- and 12-time earnings and
dividend yields exceeding 5%. Maybe confrontation breaks out all over the Middle East, or
problems between Russia and the Baltic States and Poland, or a confrontation over Taiwan. On
top of it all, a nasty election year is facing us.
We have set forth many of the problems this country is facing. Statistics indicate we are already
in a mild recession. Consumer spending is down. This year’s Christmas “buy now, pay later”
plans were up 42% from last year; household disposable income is sliding; and savings continue
to fall.
When the market is over 30-times earnings, think of how many years it takes of great earnings by
companies to justify a 30-times multiple. That alone is enough to sit on the sidelines and enjoy
the 5%+ returns on bonds and CDs. Who needs risk like this in volatile economic and political
times? It’s wise to wait for signs favoring economic expansion. This is a good time to be in cash,
measure one’s risk, and be patient.
Caveat Emptor!
George Rauch
January 10, 2024