Good morning investors. Stocks are soaring but some strategists are turning defensive.
The bears have once again revived chatter of an age-old market question: Are we in a bubble?
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Recent history has given Wall Street little to fuss about.Â
The S&P 500 has climbed for six weeks in a row, itâs finished 10 of the last 11 months in the green, and itâs posted a 13% annualized return over the last 10 years.Â
Stretch that to 30 years and the most popular benchmark index in the world has seen a total return over 1,177% despite multiple recessions and market crashes.
There is a clear lesson from the chart above: Stocks generally go up, especially when you zoom out.Â
Apparently Goldman Sachs isnât so sure.
None of the above kept the bank from publishing a glum, lost-decade outlook for the years ahead.
âWe estimate the S&P 500 will deliver an annualized nominal total return of 3% during the next 10 years,â the bankâs portfolio strategy team wrote in a note October 18.Â
In their view, the marketâs current concentration and valuations look unsustainable.
The indexâs biggest 10 names now make up more than one-third of the S&P 500âs total value â nearly the highest in a century, according to Goldman.Â
The thing about market history is that it can look both bullish and bearish, depending how you slice it.
Case in point, while the above chart looks like an indisputable testament to market resilience, the one below looks like a portfolio warning.Â
Popularized by Nobel-winning economist Robert Shiller, the CAPE â cyclically adjusted price/earnings multiple â tracks how valuations change by comparing stock prices to the prior decade of earnings.Â
The data suggest the S&P 500 is more expensive than it was before the 1929 crash, and itâs on a similar trajectory seen ahead of the dot-com crash.
Elevated CAPE readings in the past have led to sharp corrections or flat returns, like in the years after 2000.Â
Now, much of the recent ballooning in valuations can be chalked up to AI â the spending, investing and hype that followed OpenAIâs creation of ChatGPT in November 2022.
Not quite, according to strategists at Yardeni Research. But investors might be inching closer to âirrational exuberanceâ in the short-term.
âWe don't believe that earnings growth is the main risk to relatively high valuation multiples,â the Yardeni team said.
âRather, the downside risks are mostly attributable to the prospects of adverse geopolitical and domestic political developments through the end of this yearâŚany selloff is more likely to be a correction than a bear market.â
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Elsewhere:
đNvidia hit $3.5 trillion in value. Shares of the chip marker gained more than 4% Monday to close at a record high valuation. Itâs the second company behind Apple to ever achieve that market capitalization, and itâs inching closer to taking the title of worldâs most valuable company from Apple. (Barronâs)
đŚÂ Slower Fed cuts sound good. Thatâs according to Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City President Jeffrey Schmid. In his first public remarks since August, he said he hopes for âmodestâ and âgradualâ adjustments to interest rates, and that policymakers should stay cautious. (Bloomberg)
đĽGold keeps climbing. Once again bullion hit a record high on Monday â and so did silver. Silver futures briefly topped $34 per ounce for the first time in 12 years. Gold and silver have both beat the S&P 500 in 2024, gaining 26% and 35% year-to-date. (Yahoo Finance)
Rapid-fire:
Trumpâs tax plans could exempt 93 million Americans from income taxes (CNBC)
BlackRock CEO Larry Fink said the presidential election âreally doesnât matterâ for financial markets (FT)
Disney plans to name Bob Igerâs successor in early 2026 (WSJ)
The IMF chief said Monday that painful high prices arenât going away anytime soon (Reuters)
Famed short-seller Carson Block has no plans to bet against Tesla (Business Insider)
Benchmark diesel prices saw their biggest one-week decline in nearly a year (FreightWaves)
Election odds according to Kalshi, the biggest US prediction market:
Last thing:
modest proposal @modestproposal1
Goldman strategists calculate a 72% probability that 10 year treasuries outperform the S&P 500 over the next decade