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Been seeing a lot of chatter about whether stocks are overvalued right now, and honestly, the data is making me a bit uneasy.
Let's start with what people are actually feeling. A Pew survey from February showed 72% of Americans have a negative view of the economy, with nearly 40% thinking things will get worse over the next year. That's not exactly confidence.
Now here's where it gets interesting. Two major metrics are flashing warning signs that most people aren't talking about enough.
First, the S&P 500 Shiller CAPE ratio - basically a measure of whether stocks are trading at reasonable prices relative to their historical earnings - is sitting around 40 right now. To put that in perspective, it was only that high during the dot-com bubble in 1999, and it peaked again just before the 2022 bear market. The long-term average is around 17. So yeah, stocks are looking stretched.
Then there's the Buffett indicator, which compares total U.S. stock market value to GDP. Warren Buffett himself has said that when this ratio hits 200%, you're "playing with fire." We're currently at around 219%. It peaked at 193% right before 2022's downturn.
Does this mean a crash is definitely coming? No. Markets can stay overvalued for longer than anyone expects, and even if a pullback happens, it might take months to materialize. But ignoring these signals would be naive.
The practical takeaway: if you're worried about volatility, focus on quality. Companies with strong fundamentals, solid balance sheets, and real earnings tend to weather storms better than everything else. That's not sexy advice, but it works.
Worth keeping an eye on. The market's been running hard, and these indicators suggest caution might be warranted. Whether it's stocks or other assets you're watching, quality over speculation is always the move when valuations look this stretched.