Weekly S&P 500 Chart Storm: Stocks Just Keep Going Up

 | Nov 06, 2017 06:25AM ET

h2 Summary

The theme this week is "stock prices only go up" (sarcasm alert).

The charts showed higher valuations and increasingly extreme levels of bullish sentiment across the various indicators.

Yet, also referenced was the point that picking market tops is hard, and high valuations and extreme sentiment is not enough by itself.

Those who follow my personal account on Twitter will be familiar with my weekly S&P 500 #ChartStorm, in which I pick out 10 charts on the S&P 500 to tweet. Typically, I'll pick a couple of themes and hammer them home with the charts, but sometimes it's just a selection of charts that will add to your perspective and help inform your own view—whether it's bearish, bullish, or something else!

The purpose of this note is to add some extra context beyond the 140 characters of Twitter. It's worth noting that the aim of the #ChartStorm isn't necessarily to arrive at a certain view, but to highlight charts and themes worth paying attention to.

So here's another S&P 500 #ChartStorm write-up:

1. S&P 500 Valuation Views: First up is a look at 3 key measures of S&P 500 valuations: the forward P/E (price to consensus next 12 months' earnings), the trailing P/E (price to last 12 months' actual earnings), and the PE10 (price to average actual earnings across the last 10 years). All three indicators show a picture of rising valuations, but the question is, "Are high valuations enough to be worried/bearish?" We talked about this in the weekly report - the main takeaway is that economics need to deteriorate and/or monetary policy needs to tighten much more in order to affect a drop in the fundamentals. Until then, valuation is a background feature.

Bottom line: Valuations are high, but this alone is not enough to be bearish.