TheStig wrote:I understand there is more cost to employees and it will be gradual to get everyone back. We already have a lot of jobs people just aren't willing to do that will get filled and it'll likely be a lot of pt's or temps to avoid those costs but I think the fundamentals of the economy haven't changed and things will get going.
Prior to the coronavirus, there were lots of indications that the stock market was in a bubble and was probably inflated by about 20% relative to earnings/growth/etc...
The price of the stock market now is reasonable if there were no coronavirus impact. It would still represent about 7% growth per year since 2016 at its current price level, if you look at GDP growth or earnings growth that's actually a lot more in line with this value than the high.
I generally track the sp500, a fair value of the sp500 now is probably sub 2000 based on growth / earnings potential / risk relative to other investments and historical levels. This was a pandemic that destroyed our economy in the middle of what should have been a bubble anyway.
I don't know where the market will go, because there are lots of reasons people may pump money into the market regardless of what the real value should be, but based on a rational value of return on investment, the market is heavily overvalued at this point IMO. Though the market has often sustained heavily overvalued states for extended periods of time.
If you look at a rational value for the market, it's probably about 5%-6% yield above the risk free rate (typically viewed as the return on the 30 year US treasury). That rate is 1.29% today, so you'd expect the yield on the stock market today to be rationally priced at 6-7%. The backwards PE ratio of the market at today's price is 18.72 which is 5.3% which would signal undervalued if we thought this future 12 months was the same value as the past, but we don't expect that. So right now, we've probably priced in a decline in earnings of about 5-10% or so, but we probably really expect earnings to be about 50% worse.
Granted, this isn't a pure analysis, because it really depends on whether you view this earnings hit as one time or pervasive of a recession that lasts for years and there are obviously more factors at play, and the market can just stay way overvalued regardless. However the return on investment case is something which is generally true.
We certainly will enter a point that's likely similar to May 2009
https://www.multpl.com/s-p-500-pe-ratioWhere basically, everyone was betting on teh market to recover and the earnings weren't there yet, because earnings are a trailing indicator. Whether we're at that May 2009 point now or not would be an interesting question, but I don't think so, because I think job loss and economic conditions will get worse for a long time, and we won't fully be on the road to recovery until there's a solution for coronavirus other than social distancing (vaccine, quarantined out of existence, effective treatment that removes mortality risk, etc..)