Why Stocks Won't Crash (At Least For Now)

 | Apr 13, 2014 07:43AM ET

Many stock markets are only marginally off record highs and yet there's already a growing chorus of calls for a larger correction or crash. Comparisons to 2008, 1999, 1987 and 1929 are all the rage. The Internet can be partially blamed for this "noise" as financial bloggers revert to sensationalism to get attention amid the cacophony of market commentary. But it also speaks to the enduring psychological damage to investors from the 2008 financial crisis. Fears that every correction will result in a crash remain front of mind.

The market pullback has certainly let the bears come out to play. Well-known commentator, Marc Faber, aka Dr Doom, appeared on here ). 

Henry Blodget of Business Insider also reiterated his less precise, albeit more dire, market call this past week . He thinks the US market could drop up to 50% over the next 1-2 years. He bases this on expensive valuations, all-time high corporate margins which are likely to mean-revert and Fed tightening effectively taking away the punch bowl.

Asia Confidential believes Blodget makes a number of valid arguments and could end up being right. But he's way to early with the call. And the principal reason is that history shows Fed tightening has been bullish for stocks, at least initially. 

Today's post will explore Blodget's views in detail, the holes therein as well as the more plausible risk to markets in the short-term: a deflationary bust precipitated by Japan and/or China.

h2 A Blodget crash/h2 Henry Blodget is the renowned CEO and Editor of Business Insider, the financial news website. He's more famously known as the former equities analyst who made some big buy calls on bubbly Internet stocks in the late '90s. He was banned from the securities industry for private emails which conflicted with the bullish advice that he was providing clients.
 
In recent months and again this week, Blodget has made the case that a major market decline of up to 50% is likely over the next 1-2 years. There are cynics who suggest that Blodget is trying to make up for his lack of caution as an analyst. There may be a grain of truth to that but it's not our immediate concern. 
 
Your author will instead focus on Blodget's considered and thoughtful arguments. Blodget says there are three reasons why the US stock market is vulnerable to a severe correction:
 
1) Stocks are very expensive. Blodget primarily relies on the cyclically-adjusted Shiller price to earnings ratio (PER). This ratio differs from a normal PER as it takes the average earnings, adjusted for inflation, of the past 10 years. This seeks to smooth out business peaks and troughs.

The Shiller PER currently sits at 25x, way above the historical average of 15x. It's only been at these levels twice over the past century, in 1929 and 2000. We all know what happened in those years.
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