Looking Into The Future With A Rear-View Mirror

 | Aug 22, 2013 02:45PM ET

How do you know if the stock market (or any asset class) is overvalued and ripe for a fall? Wait a year or two and you’ll have a definitive answer.

Real-time decisions, alas, are slightly more complicated. Yes, there are several techniques that you can apply for estimating expected return, but you might start with one metric that easy to compute and always up to date: trailing return. It’s hardly perfect and it’s burdened with all the usual caveats. But it’s a great starting point for developing some context for thinking about what's overpriced, what’s not, and how to tell the difference.

Take The S&P 500
As a simple example, let’s consider the US stock market by way of everyone’s favorite benchmark: the S&P 500. Let’s say that your time horizon is one year, although we could just as easily use five or ten years, for instance. Sticking with a one-year period, let's consider how returns stack up through history. For some perspective, here’s how the trailing one-year return compares with three-year results. Not surprisingly, the one-year change bounces around its less-volatile three-year counterpart. The two never diverge for long, of course, since they’re ultimately linked at the hip. But in the short run, as we know, irrational exuberance and its dark cousin can and do dominate.