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Why Rates May Not Be Cut Until June
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A Sign Of Progress In Solving U.S. Economic Problems
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Fed Keeps Rates Unchanged; Expects Easing In 2024
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Have You Logged Into Your Social Security Account?
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The Great Fake Out Of 2023 Is Poised To Extend Into 2024
All year long, the economy and stock prices have fooled experts and consumers, outperforming expectations month after month.
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Test Your Financial Planning IQ
The five questions below are a challenge meant to allow you to assess your knowledge of investing, tax and financial planning. If you have been following our news stream, this quiz draws on familiar ground. The answers are below.
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Planning Briefs
Capitalizing On Current Financial Economic Trends
Published Wednesday, March 10, 2021 at: 8:16 AM EST
Financial planning is always a challenge, but things really are different now. Consider the confluence of unprecedented events:
- a pandemic
- $6 trillion of federal aid to individuals and businesses in about 12 months
- interest rates near the all-time low
- almost no inflation for over a decade
- stocks trading at an all-time high
In addition to the unusually long list of unprecedented events investors face currently, the stock market is expensive by traditional valuation measures.
The trailing price to earnings for the 12 months ended March 4, 2021 was 26.6. For every dollar of profits through the 12 month period ending December 31, 2020, investors in the average stock in the Standard & Poor’s 500 stock index were paying $26.63. The average price/earnings ratio of the S&P 500 since 1961 is 16.6.
But what’s different this time is that the 10-year Treasury bond yield is very low. Although the price/earnings ratio has been a reliable indicator of stock valuations in the past, interest rates are so low that it currently makes the p/e ratio a poor measure of whether stocks are priced too high. Even the Federal Reserve thinks p/e ratios are not relevant for evaluating the risk in the stock market currently.
According to the Federal Reserve Board’s November 2020, Financial Stability Report (FSR), which is published semi-annually, stocks are reasonably priced relative to the yield on a 10-year Treasury bond.
The Fed’s model for evaluating whether the stock market is expensive is shown in this chart. The Fed is not worried about the high p/e ratio of stocks. The Fed is focused on the spread of the 10-year Treasury bond yield versus the current p/e ratio. Since yields are so low, the Fed does not view the high p/e ratios on stocks as a big risk.
“Prices relative to forecasts of corporate earnings have also risen considerably and are currently near the top of their historical distribution, even though there is significant uncertainty in the earnings outlook among market participants,” the Fed says in its most recent FSR “However, while the gap between the forward earnings-to-price ratio and the expected real yield on 10-year Treasury securities—a rough measure of the premium that investors require for holding risky corporate equities—has declined since May, it remains above its historical median due to the low level of Treasury yields. This development suggests that investor risk appetite, though higher since May, is still within historical norms.”
While stocks are currently priced near all-time highs, traditional valuation measures are also higher than normal, and while a confluence of unprecedented events are likely to make stocks more expensive in the days and weeks ahead, the yield curve is nowhere close to inverting. The Fed has caused all of the recessions and triggered most bear markets in stocks in modern history, usually by inverting the yield curve. For example, the Fed inverted the yield curve before the stock market collapse of 2000. Currently, the yield curve is not even close to inverting, giving the Fed room to raise interest rates as the economy continues to recover from the pandemic recession.
This is a time during which professional financial advice is critically important as well as a time to plan and to capitalize on the unusual conditions and opportunities it is spawning.
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