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The current environment, where forward price-to-earnings multiples fall significantly while earnings growth remains strong (up over 20%), is a classic sign of a temporary correction within a larger bull market, not the start of a prolonged downturn.
The current market correction is unusual as it's occurring without a recession or Fed tightening. The S&P 500's significant 18% P/E multiple drop, combined with accelerating earnings, suggests the market has already priced in bad news and the correction is nearing its conclusion.
Contrary to popular belief, earnings growth has a very low correlation with decadal stock returns. The primary driver is the change in the valuation multiple (e.g., P/E ratio expansion or contraction). The correlation between 10-year real returns and 10-year valuation changes is a staggering 0.9, while it is tiny for earnings growth.
The Federal Reserve is easing monetary policy at a time when corporate earnings are already growing strongly. This rare combination has only occurred once in the last 40 years, in 1998, which was followed by two more years of a powerful bull market run.
With the S&P 500's Price-to-Earnings ratio near 28 (almost double the historic average) and the Shiller P/E near 40, the stock market is priced for perfection. These high valuation levels have historically only been seen right before major market corrections, suggesting a very thin safety net for investors.
Contrary to conventional wisdom, re-accelerating inflation can be a positive for stocks. It indicates that corporations have regained pricing power, which boosts earnings growth. This improved earnings outlook can justify a lower equity risk premium, allowing for higher stock valuations.
Despite the S&P 500's relative strength, the broader market shows significant weakness, with over half the Russell 3000 stocks down 20% or more. This is not complacency but a sign of a well-advanced correction, suggesting growth risks are already being priced in by the majority of equities.
Contrary to the belief that a low P-E ratio is always better, a high ratio can signify a 'growth stock.' This indicates investors are willing to pay more because the company is reinvesting its earnings into future growth, betting on higher profitability over time.
Early stages of a bull market are often met with investor negativity and equity sell-offs. This pessimism is a typical part of the behavioral cycle that precedes later-stage optimism and the euphoria which ultimately marks the market's peak. It is a sign that the cycle is not yet over.
Unlike previous downturns that priced in a full recession, the current correction is expected to be less severe. Key buffers include a better earnings backdrop, significant fiscal support from tax cuts, and a more accommodative Federal Reserve policy compared to prior periods.
Despite the start of a new bull market, current 'frothy' conditions make a significant pullback likely. This should be viewed not as a threat, but as a normal occurrence and a buying opportunity. Near-term catalysts include escalating China trade tensions, stress in funding markets from quantitative tightening, and peaking earnings revisions.