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Are Stocks Cheap Following October’s Correction?.............................NOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO 

By: capt_nemo in POPE 5 | Recommend this post (3)
Sat, 03 Nov 18 7:36 AM | 73 view(s)
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Note to all new readers: All we care about is the pursuit of truth, regardless of whether it reveals something positive or negative. There are many more factors than we can review in any one specific article. We also don't have all the answers. If you have a point of view based on facts that we did not examine, please let us know in the comments below or via Twitter @UPFINAcom.

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The concept of valuation is interesting because if you believe in the efficient market hypothesis, whenever stocks have multiple expansion or contraction it’s for a reason. This makes it impossible to outperform the market, in theory. Good thing we live in the real world. The more straightforward theory on investing, which allows for the possibility for investors to outperform the market, is that stocks can have the wrong multiple and imply faulty earnings expectations. When earnings multiples contract in a panic without a change to the fundamentals, it makes sense to buy them.

A combination of the two theories makes sense as multiple contractions and expansions always happen for a reason, but sometimes those reasons are faulty which allows astute investors to profit. For example, if stock multiples fell in October 2018 because a recession could come, but an investor is highly confident there won’t be one, the investor can profit by buying stocks on the temporary dip in multiples.

To be clear, the main driver of this bull market is profit growth. From Q1 2010 to Q3 2018, 70% of returns came from profit growth, 23% came from multiple increases, and 7% came from share reductions. In 2018 we’ve seen over 20% profit growth and record buybacks, but stocks have had low single digit returns because of multiple compression.

Stocks Have Gotten Cheaper
The chart below shows the attribution to total returns in the S&P 500 since 2014.


Source: Bloomberg
Usually, there is multiple expansion in bull markets because investors are optimistic and uncertainty is low. You can think of multiples as a certainty premium. When multiples are high, you pay a premium for stocks because the economy is solid and there aren’t many negative catalysts on the horizon. You pay a low certainty premium when there is a lack of visibility like in 2008.

As you can see from the chart above, as of late October total returns in the S&P 500 are about flat which means there has been severe multiple compression because earnings growth has been above 20% in the first 3 quarters. Even if the multiple expansion in 2017 was partially because investors anticipated taxes would be cut and earnings growth would be very high in 2018, stocks are still cheap now because the multiple compression in 2018 is way more than the multiple expansion in 2017.

Catalysts Of Uncertainty
The discussion on uncertainty is so interesting because it’s never fully settled how uncertain the future is. There are a bunch of uncertainties heading into 2019, but it’s fair to question how the correction has played out.There wasn’t one event which set it off and it has been severe. It’s possible to simply chalk this up to the tendency for bear markets and corrections to be unorganized and wild. Bear markets actually include many of the sharpest rallies. Some of the catalysts for the uncertainty spike are the end of the semiconductor cycle, the Fed being expected to potentially move the Fed funds rate above the long run rate, the trade war escalating, the fear the fiscal stimulus is winding down, and the weakness in housing.

Stocks need to move higher when uncertainty doesn’t lead to a negative catalyst because continued EPS growth means stocks get cheaper when they don’t increase. One pivotal point to keep in mind is the S&P 500 is now cheaper than it was after the January-February correction because earnings have increased. As you can see from the chart below, as of October 26th, the S&P 500’s forward PE multiple fell to 15.2 which is below the average since 1980 and the average since 1950.


Source: LPL Research
It’s up to you as an investor to determine if the low certainty premium is justifiable or if stocks are a huge buy right now.

2019 Estimates Steady
We have discussed in previous articles that the rate of change of earnings estimates is more important than current results. You can decide to value stocks based on trailing or forward earnings, but the rate of change in estimates predicts the latest movement in stocks. Since the 4th quarter started on October 1st, the estimates for Q4 earnings growth have fallen from 15.37% to 13.46% which is bearish.

http://upfina.com/are-stocks-cheap-following-octobers-correction/




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Realist - Everybody in America is soft, and hates conflict. The cure for this, both in politics and social life, is the same -- hardihood. Give them raw truth.




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