You're talking about the historical accuracy of average earnings estimates, whereas I am assessing the likely accuracy of current estimates for 2012 and 2013. Those are two quite different things.
Low bond yields relative to stock earnings yields means that stocks are attractive investments by comparison. Assuming earnings stay stable or better, then the odds of investment capital seeing a major shift from expensive bonds to cheap stocks, are far higher than the reverse.
A phrase like "It doesn't mean that you won't suffer a 50% drop in stock prices next year, or that significant inflation starting in five years won't completely swamp your 5% nominal gains" is completely meaningless. Every single day, there are always outlier scenarios that "could" happen (e.g. WWIII, getting run over by a bus, the stock market being nationalised by a leftist government etc) - that in no way implies that trade X or Y is a bad trade. Besides, no competent trader just fires and forgets - managing open positions, and adjusting to events as they unfold, is a key component of trading. If it looks like stocks are going into a bear market, I will exit my longs and go short. If it looks like high inflation is coming, I will load up on T-bond puts and gold etc.
As for sentiment, I don't use any of the measures you cited, and my view of current sentiment is that it's sceptical. We'll just have to disagree on that one.
You didn't address improving corporate earnings; the bullish market action; or the improving macro data and news flow. And out of the 3 of my 6 points that you addressed, with 2 of them you just effectively said "they might not be bullish", you didn't give any actual reasons why they implied a bearish view.
Low bond yields relative to stock earnings yields means that stocks are attractive investments by comparison. Assuming earnings stay stable or better, then the odds of investment capital seeing a major shift from expensive bonds to cheap stocks, are far higher than the reverse.
A phrase like "It doesn't mean that you won't suffer a 50% drop in stock prices next year, or that significant inflation starting in five years won't completely swamp your 5% nominal gains" is completely meaningless. Every single day, there are always outlier scenarios that "could" happen (e.g. WWIII, getting run over by a bus, the stock market being nationalised by a leftist government etc) - that in no way implies that trade X or Y is a bad trade. Besides, no competent trader just fires and forgets - managing open positions, and adjusting to events as they unfold, is a key component of trading. If it looks like stocks are going into a bear market, I will exit my longs and go short. If it looks like high inflation is coming, I will load up on T-bond puts and gold etc.
As for sentiment, I don't use any of the measures you cited, and my view of current sentiment is that it's sceptical. We'll just have to disagree on that one.
You didn't address improving corporate earnings; the bullish market action; or the improving macro data and news flow. And out of the 3 of my 6 points that you addressed, with 2 of them you just effectively said "they might not be bullish", you didn't give any actual reasons why they implied a bearish view.
Quote from Specterx:
Like the others I have to disagree.
First, I expect the uselessness of forward operating earnings estimates as a valuation measure has been sufficiently demonstrated by several sources (Hussman comes to mind). And it makes perfect sense: we know analysts using this method were saying stocks were cheap in 2007 while still 'expensive' in late 2008/early 09, FOEs involve simple extrapolation of short-term trends and miss long-term cyclical or secular factors (as for instance the Shiller PE may capture), analyst estimates are invariably too optimistic even in bull runs (but not at genuine lows!), and so on.
Second, the level of bond yields doesn't imply anything about the future direction of stock prices. If you can estimate stocks' valuation and future returns, low yields may mean stocks are relatively a better investment, over a similar ten, twenty or whatever year period. It doesn't mean that you won't suffer a 50% drop in stock prices next year, or that significant inflation starting in five years won't completely swamp your 5% nominal gains. And in fact, in 100% of historical cases, secular bear markets have terminated (and bull markets begun) at valuation levels far below those seen in 2009, let alone what we see today. Even rising earnings would not necessarily mean rising prices: in the 1972-74 bear market S&P earnings actually rose from under $6 to $9, while prices crashed by over 40%.
Finally, the only sentiment indicator I'm aware of that indicates fear or pessimism is Yale's "Crash Confidence Index." AAII survey shows 45% bulls; mufu cash is near record lows; stock buybacks and insider sales are surging; Sentimentrader's indicators range from neutral to highly optimistic (Rydex inflows for instance show a record high bullish skew, comparable to 2007 top). And of course analysts are regularly hammering away with the Forward Operating Earnings model, while last month Bloomberg came out with a story titled "Global Strategists Are Abandoning Bearish Views." There's hardly a 'wall of worry' here and even if there were, the implications are decidedly short-term in nature.
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