by Lance Roberts, RIA
In the semi-annual Financial Stability Report, the Fed issued a stock market warning as elevated valuations are causing markets to be âvulnerable to significant declinesâ. To wit:
Prices of risky assets generally increased since the previous report, and, in some markets, prices are high compared with expected cash flows. House prices have increased rapidly since May, continuing to outstrip increases in rent. Nevertheless, despite rising housing valuations, little evidence exists of deteriorating credit standards or highly leveraged investment activity in the housing market. Asset prices remain vulnerable to significant declines should investor risk sentiment deteriorate, progress on containing the virus disappoint, or the economic recovery stall.
Is the Fedâs stock market warning justified?
The Fed is stating that valuations, as the prices of âriskyâ assets keep rising, make the stock market continually more vulnerable to a crash. It is the âstability/instabilityâ paradox.
What could cause asset prices to crash? The Fed notes specifically:
- Another surge, or variant, of the COVID virus,
- A stalling of the economic recovery, or;
- Investor ârisk-sentimentâ deteriorates
Given that Fed interventions boosted the stock market and âinvestor sentiment,â the withdrawal of that support could be problematic. As I discussed in âBob Farrellâs Rules For A QE Market:â
âThe high correlation between the financial markets and the Federal Reserve interventions is all you need to know to navigate the market.â

Those direct or psychological interventions are the basis for justifying all the speculative âriskâ investors can muster.


Fed Driven âIrrational Exuberanceâ
There is little doubt that âriskyâ assets are surging higher, driven by speculative investor confidence. That speculation appears throughout the market, from record call options to âmemeâ stocks surging in price.

But itâs not just the retail investor piling into stocks, but even professional managers are now âall inâ the equity risk pool.

Of course, such speculative appetite is no surprise as the Fedâs monetary policy created the âPavlovianâ response to ârisk-taking.â Or, more commonly known as:
âDonât fight the Fed.â
And âfight the Fedâ retail investors did not. As shown below, household equity ownership is rocketing higher, towards $30 trillion.

Before you marvel at the feat of household equity ownership, you need to remember two crucial factors.
- The top 10% of income earners own 90% of those assets, and;
- It took $43.5 trillion dollars of liquidity to create that âwealth.â

Given the amount of âliquidityâ thrown at the stock market, the Fed should take responsibility for investorsâ âirrational exuberance.â
Valuations Are Extreme By Virtually Every Measure
âAcross most asset classes, valuation measures are high relative to historical norms. Since the May 2021 Financial Stability Report, equity prices rose further.â â Federal Reserve
The description of valuations by the Fed is somewhat misleading. When saying something is high relative to historical norms, its meaning gets lost without some context. In this case, the context best comes from historical charts of various valuation measures.
The most obvious is the Shiller CAPE ratio which takes current prices dividend by 10-years of earnings. This method smoothes out the volatility of earnings that can occur on an annual basis. At 40x trailing earnings, current valuations are higher at the peak of the market in 1999.

A look at market capitalization to the economy also gives you some sense of the âexcessâ in markets. Given that earnings and revenue come from economic activity, the market can not âoutgrowâ the economy long term.

Lastly, price-to-sales (what happens at the top line of the income statement) is also exceedingly stretched.

While stock prices can advance, earnings are ultimately a function of economic growth and sales. Therefore, when excesses occur, an eventual reversion must, and will, occur.
The only question is the timing and the catalyst.
Hoping For A âSoft Landingâ
In the Fed notes, valuations are elevated; in the stock market warning report, they identify several risks to the stock market.

The Fed report, highlighting the most salient risks that could undermine the financial system, flagged many previously stated concerns. Those included âstructural vulnerabilitiesâ in money market funds. âstable coins,â which the central bank now uses as a generic warning about risks associated with cryptocurrency adoption, inflation, and fading fiscal support.
But, as always, the Fed hopes they can orchestrate a âsoft-landingâ for the stock market.
Unfortunately, the Fed has a miserable track record of such outcomes.
Richard Thaler, the famous University of Chicago professor who won the Nobel Prize in economics, stated:
âWe seem to be living in the riskiest moment of our lives, and yet the stock market seems to be napping. I admit to not understanding it.
I donât know about you, but Iâm nervous, and it seems like when investors are nervous, theyâre prone to being spooked. Nothing seems to spook the market.â
Such is always the case, just before something does.
History Always Rhymes
While the Fed notes valuations are elevated, the crucial message to investors gets obfuscated. From current valuation levels, the expected rate of return for investors over the next decade will be low.
There is a large community of individuals who suggest differently. They rationalize a case this âbull marketâ can continue for years longer. But, unfortunately, any measure of valuation does not support that claim.
Such does not mean that markets will produce single-digit rates of return each year for the next decade. The reality is there will be some great years to get invested. Unfortunately, there will likely also be a couple of tough years in between.
That is the nature of investing. It is just part of the full-market cycle.
The economic cycle, demographics, debt, and deficit also suggest optimistic views are unlikely.Â
âHistory doesnât repeat itself, but it often rhymes.â â Mark Twain
Unfortunately, despite the Fedâs stock market warning, the market will ultimately deal with âirrational exuberance,â just as it has done every time previously.