Understanding Current Market Valuations and Risks

After three quarters of 2024, the S&P 500 is up 20.81%, and +34.38% over the past 12 months (Morningstar). Portfolios that include US small and mid-cap stocks, and international, have underperformed the large-cap US market. Price multiples over twenty times earnings are historically high.

Current valuations are based on optimistic assumptions. The risks seem skewed to the downside for the S&P 500 index, but the risk is concentrated in the 10 largest stocks. Although a large decline is not inevitable and might not last long, it is something to be prepared for.

On the positive side, not one of the four primary recession indicators, including residential investment as a % of GDP, light vehicle sales, business fixed investment as a % of GDP, and total business inventory/sales ratio, is warning of recession.

The Fed recently cut interest rates for the first time this cycle because inflation is declining. That is good for stock valuations as long as economic growth remains strong. The labor market will be a key indicator to show whether inflation is declining due to a weakening economy or if underlying economic growth remains strong. Market valuation hangs in the balance.

The election circus, port strike, and geopolitical chaos are ever-present risks, but there should eventually be an upside to them.

Investing involves risk, including possible loss of principle. Past performance does not guarantee future performance.