You’re Gonna Pay How Much? Valuation Extremes Are No Longer ‘Justified’

 | Nov 23, 2016 11:32PM ET

For several years, ultra-low interest rates “justified” paying higher stock prices for anemic earnings growth. The 10-year Treasury yield traded in a tight range between 2.0%-2.5%. Borrowing costs remained stable or continued to fall. Indeed, the notion that rates would remain extremely low for a very long time encouraged many to pony up for a price-to-earnings (P/E) multiple of 19.

Throughout the first ten months of 2016, though, a sub-2% 10-year Treasury prompted investors to pay even higher equity valuations. Contracting profits? Not important. Diminishing revenue? Not relevant. For many folks, S&P 500 stocks were still “attractive” because its 2% dividend surpassed 1.5%-1.75% for the intermediate-term treasury benchmark.

In July and August, then, with the trailing P/E at 25, there were few dissenters. Low rates trumped everything from “Brexit” fears to deteriorating credit fundamentals to year-over-year declines in fixed asset expenditures.