S&P 500 May Fall Another 15%

 | Jun 24, 2022 05:36AM ET

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

While stocks are down sharply on the year and cheaper in price, markets are still not reasonable from a valuation perspective. The S&P 500 is still trading at an elevated PE ratio when considering the Fed's agenda to tighten monetary policy and the rising risk of a recession.

That valuation will likely drive the market down even more because historically, when the market has this many questions, it tends to bottom at a lower PE ratio. That means the current PE ratio of 16.0 is probably too high for the time being because that has been around the historical average for the last 20 years.

At least in recent times, the S&P 500 has seen its PE ratio bottom closer to 14 times earnings. That suggests there is still a decline for the broader markets as investors wrestle with the economy's direction. Additionally, as the Fed raises rates and financial conditions tighten, that will help reduce liquidity in markets which will also help to compress that PE multiple further. 

Historically going back to 2000, the average PE ratio for the next four quarters has been around 16.8. Following the 2000 stock market bubble, the S&P 500 PE ratio fell to about 14 by 2002, and that low held for several years until late 2008 when it dropped below 14 following the collapse of Lehman and the financial crisis. The 14 region also helped be a support area for the markets again in late 2018 and early 2020.