In This Article
- Exhibit 1: Market valuations have declined to levels seen in the 1960s.
- Exhibit 2: Returns on equity are strong.
- Exhibit 3: Recent growth has been concentrated in fewer sectors.
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Talk about summertime blues. After peaking above 1,500 this July, the S&P 500 suffered an abrupt 10 percent correction before ending the month of August at 1,475. As of the publication of this article, the broad market has rebounded following interest rate cuts by the US Federal Reserve bank in mid-September. But stocks remain buffeted by a volatile credit market and by concerns that current high price levels might succumb to the same economic forces. Forces that caused the markets to plunge more than 40 percent in the three years after the last peak, in 2000.
As central bankers warily eye credit markets and ponder further interest rate cuts, no one can really anticipate what might happen next in a market wracked by volatility and skittish investors. Nonetheless, a comparison of the fundamentals underpinning the S&P’s recent performance and those at the time of the 2000 peak offers insights about the parallels and divergences between the two periods. These insights can give investors a better feel for where the market is now—and where it might head next.
First, the similarities. At one level, during both the run-up to the recent peak and the earlier dot-com market surge, most of the...