U.S. Stocks Look Pricey, But Bargains Beckon Overseas
Money and Finance

U.S. Stocks Look Pricey, But Bargains Beckon Overseas


Stocks are cheap—just not U.S. stocks.

After climbing 5.2% in January, the Standard & Poor's 500-stock index is again nearing all-time highs, spurring many small investors to pile into U.S. stock funds. More than $36 billion flowed into U.S. stock mutual funds and exchange-traded funds, the highest monthly intake ever, according to TrimTabs Investment Research.

But as recoveries in other countries start to take hold, investors might do better looking abroad, say some analysts.

…..

On a longer-term basis, stocks in some other countries look even more attractive.

To project long-term returns, many investment strategists divide the market price by average earnings for the last 10 years, adjusted for inflation. The measure is known as the cyclically adjusted P/E or the "Shiller P/E" after Robert Shiller, the Yale University professor who helped popularize the measure.

On that basis, U.S. stocks look relatively expensive. At the end of January, their cyclically adjusted P/E stood at about 22, versus the historical average of about 16.

That doesn't mean U.S. stocks will necessarily suffer. In the past, when U.S. stocks have had a P/E between 20 and 25, they have gone on to return about 4.9% annually after inflation over the next five years.

But better deals can be had abroad. The cyclically adjusted P/E of battered European countries such as Ireland, Italy, Spain and Portugal all sit below 10, according to Cambria Quantitative Research, which manages $120 million. In the past, when such P/Es have been below 10, the countries went on to return 17% annually after inflation over the next five years, according to Cambria.





- Andrew Smithers On Using Cape In International Markets
Link to Part 1: The problem of Cape and non-US markets (part 1) The cyclically adjusted price-earnings ratio (Cape) has become well known as a way of valuing the US equity market. Its moderate success in this role has led to the assumption that the...

- Hussman Weekly Market Comment: Sitting Ducks
The present market context is this: from a valuation standpoint, virtually every reliable measure of market valuation we observe is now within the highest 1% of historical observations prior to the late-1990’s bubble. “Reliable” in this context...

- Gundlach Dips Toe Into Uber-indexing
DoubleLine Capital LP plans to launch an enhanced index fund based on Yale University economics professor Robert Shiller's cyclically adjusted price-earnings ratio.  The DoubleLine Shiller Enhanced CAPE Fund will use derivatives — either swaps...

- Hussman Weekly Market Comment: The Siren's Song Of The Unfinished Half-cycle
Given the extent and maturity of the recent advance, it’s very odd that analysts are now beginning to toss around the idea that stocks have entered a secular bull market. These notions are based not on the level of valuation, nor on the duration of...

- Shiller And Barclays Launch Equity Indices
Barclays and Robert Shiller, the Yale economist, are to launch a series of US equity indices to identify undervalued sectors by comparing stocks’ long-term value in a way that looks through short-term swings in profitability. The indices are based on...



Money and Finance








.