Uncertainty is lingering for investors following a recent mixed batch of data — softer-than-expected inflation, stronger-than-anticipated jobs and wages — as we kick off the third week before Christmas.
That’s as we wind down a year that just hasn’t been great for most investors at all. Feeling your pain a bit is Hussman Investment Trust president and long-time bear in residence, John Hussman, who says investors are facing a “trap door” type situation with stocks right now.
The manager says he’s finding it hard to get constructive on these “overvalued markets with ragged and divergent internals” — conditions that he notes were seen at 2000, 2007, and 2020 market peaks.
“Year-to-date market losses have retraced the frothiest segment of the recent speculative bubble, yet valuations remain at levels that we continue to associate with negative expected S&P 500 SPX,
As of Nov. 30, he says the S&P 500’s total return is down less than 15% from the most extreme historic levels of stock market valuations, based on a century of market cycles.
His chart below is the money manager’s “most reliable valuation measure, based on its correlation with actual subsequent S&P 500 total returns in market cycles across history: the ratio of U.S. nonfinancial market capitalization to gross value-added (MarketCap/GVA). ” In short, valuations are still fairly nose-bleedy:
That’s even as they’ve come off the extreme levels seen at the beginning of 2022 when interest rates were at zero, he said. Hikes since then mean yield-seeking speculation has pared back, leaving the “equity market at speculative valuations, but without the support of speculative pressures,” said Hussman.
What does it all mean?
“In our view, steep market losses generally reflect risk-aversion meeting a low-risk premium. As a result, we continue to describe market conditions, particularly in equities as a ‘trap door’ situation,” he writes. He’s fully or nearly fully hedged across their three main funds.
“As always, we believe that the strongest return/risk profile for stocks emerges when a material retreat in valuations is joined by a shift to uniformly favorable market internals. We’ve observed such a shift after every bear market decline since I introduced our key measure of internals in 1998, as well as in a century of historical data,” he said.
And of course, the raggedy internals seen presently mean that shift is not here yet.
“We continue to believe that a value-conscious, risk-managed, full-cycle discipline, focused on the combination of valuations and market internals, will be essential in navigating market volatility in the years ahead,” said Hussman.
Over the long run, investors will be challenged indeed, he finds.
His below chart shows their estimate of how returns could look over 12 years in a conventional passive portfolio mix invested 60% in the S&P 500, 30% in Treasury bonds, and 10% in Treasury bills. That red line shows actual subsequent 12-year returns for this same portfolio mix.
Hussman does have about 10% in precious metals in its Strategic Total Return Fund HSTRX,
Opinion: There’s a strong possibility that the bear market in stocks is over as investors have given up hope
Stocks DJIA,
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Hong Kong stocks HSI,
Tesla TSLA,
Special purpose acquisition company Concord Acquisition CNDB,
Credit Suisse CS,
The Institute for Supply Management’s service index and factory orders are Monday’s highlights in a relatively data-light week.
Farmers and scientists have developed heat-resistant wheat crops.
Iran has shut down its “morality police,” blamed for the death of a woman that triggered months of protests
Investors chasing bond prices higher in the near term should tread carefully, according to this chart from Matt Maley, Miller + Tabak.’s chief market strategist, in a weekend note to clients.
He said they warned in early October that the yield on the 10-year Treasury note TMUBMUSD10Y,
“Therefore, we believe investors should be careful about chasing bonds right now (Treasury bonds or otherwise) over the near-term. You could/should be able to get better prices later this month and/or early in the new year,” said Maley.
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Barbara Kollmeyer is based in Madrid, where she leads MarketWatch’s pre-markets coverage of financial markets and writes the Need to Know column. She has worked in London and Los Angeles for MarketWatch previously. Follow her on Twitter @bkollmeyer.
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