How High Is Too High?


The S&P 500 logged a stellar first quarter of 2024, rising just over 10% in 3 months. Moreover, it has gained more than 28% since the October low, just five months ago. It is likely that something will happen to trigger a sell-off from these levels. Trying to time a correction is not a good strategy. Sometimes momentum begets momentum. We could see another 10% rise before a reversal. The price of market returns is volatility. It might help to view part of the recent gains as “cushion” to offset a correction.

We’ve Come a Long Way

I am attempting to lean into rising risk by delaying new cash deployments and allocating new funds to value oriented positions. On the positive side, the Morningstar Market Valuation indicator suggests that the market is only 4% overvalued. That does not suggest a change in strategy, but I see significant parts of the S&P 500 trading at valuations that stretch my imagination.


Valuation and concentration risks are becoming elevated, but a correction is not inevitable in the near term. The key factor, as usual, is earnings and cash flow growth that provide fundamental support for market valuations. Another moderate risk factor would be fewer or delayed rate cuts. More impactful, but less likely factors include an inflation rebound or an earnings slowdown.

The overall outlook remains positive based on the four supporting themes including:

  1. Stable growth
  2. Falling inflation
  3. Impending Fed rate cuts
  4. AI enthusiasm

I will be watching these developments.

Past performance does not indicate future performance. Investing involves risk, including loss of investing principal.