Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
- Rick Ferri
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Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
Buy? Sell? Rebalance?
The Wilshire 5000 broke new highs last week. What does that mean for the market?
I really don't know, but history shows that New Highs Don’t Lead to Selloffs.
Rick Ferri
PS. This is not market timing. I do not time markets. This is a history lesson.
The Wilshire 5000 broke new highs last week. What does that mean for the market?
I really don't know, but history shows that New Highs Don’t Lead to Selloffs.
Rick Ferri
PS. This is not market timing. I do not time markets. This is a history lesson.
The Education of an Index Investor: born in darkness, finds indexing enlightenment, overcomplicates everything, embraces simplicity.
- bertilak
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
Now what?
Root for a 10 year high!
Root for a 10 year high!
May neither drought nor rain nor blizzard disturb the joy juice in your gizzard. -- Squire Omar Barker (aka S.O.B.), the Cowboy Poet
- daytona084
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
My Investment Policy Statement does not call for any particular action to be taken in the event that stocks reach a 5-year high. So I will do nothing out of the ordinary.
Good answer?
Good answer?
- EternalOptimist
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
Nothing. I suppose that's positive reinforcement to 'stay the course'
"When nothing goes right....go left"
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
Rick,
Past performance rules!
Is it actually true that investors are only just now starting to shift back into equity funds, or is it just media hype? I've tried to find actual data on net fund inflows without any success. All I find is financial news blather.
JW
Past performance rules!
Is it actually true that investors are only just now starting to shift back into equity funds, or is it just media hype? I've tried to find actual data on net fund inflows without any success. All I find is financial news blather.
JW
Retired at Last
- Clearly_Irrational
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
The market is within what I would call the rational range of 10-25 on the Schiller PE10 so at the moment no action is required. Outside of that range it might be time to evaluate the situation and see why things are so distorted to determine if anything out of the ordinary needed to be done.
Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
Now what?
yawn... is there supposed to be something to do?
yawn... is there supposed to be something to do?
Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
But they do lead to rebalancing! Just took some gains to rebalance last week in my sheltered accounts. Now I can root for a big sell off to buy some cheap shares
Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
Rick,
Excellent article.
There's also a lot of noise about increased insider selling, and that being a broad sell indicator. Perhaps this could be a topic for another article?
Thanks for helping us all.
Excellent article.
There's also a lot of noise about increased insider selling, and that being a broad sell indicator. Perhaps this could be a topic for another article?
Thanks for helping us all.
Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
I'm actualy thinking of doing some off-cycle rebalancing because of the highs. I ended last year about 1% higher in equities than I planned, and so far this year (one month into it) my YTD gains are > than 60% of what I was "planning on" (i.e., assuming a conservative, steady growth rate) for the whole year. So I might take some off the table. I'm only taking a portion of the current year gains, so if the market continues to go up I'm still well in, and if it goes down I'll be glad I took my gains.
- EternalOptimist
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
Isn't this where the 'regular folk' come in...buying high
Last edited by EternalOptimist on Thu Feb 07, 2013 2:45 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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- Aptenodytes
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
That's kind of weird way to approach the rebalancing question isn't it? Any plan for equity returns on a one-year time frame is going to have gigantic error bars. I can't see how it is relevant to anything. But maybe you end up close to the same place you would with conventional rebalancing, in which case don't mess with success.Whatyear? wrote:I'm actualy thinking of doing some off-cycle rebalancing because of the highs. I ended last year about 1% higher in equities than I planned, and so far this year (one month into it) my YTD gains are > than 60% of what I was "planning on" (i.e., assuming a conservative, steady growth rate) for the whole year. So I might take some off the table. I'm only taking a portion of the current year gains, so if the market continues to go up I'm still well in, and if it goes down I'll be glad I took my gains.
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
Now what? Rebalance. And if you don't have commodities in your portfolio...add them:>)
Last edited by hazlitt777 on Fri Feb 08, 2013 11:14 am, edited 1 time in total.
- Rick Ferri
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
Ha, ha. Funny guy.How what? Rebalance. And if you don't have commodities in your portfolio...add them:>)
Yes, I agree with rebalancing if it's "time" or equity gains have put your portfolio over a percentage band.
Commodities? Well, that's your call. I'm not smart enough to time the price of wheat or pork belly futures.
Rick Ferri
The Education of an Index Investor: born in darkness, finds indexing enlightenment, overcomplicates everything, embraces simplicity.
Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
I have pork bellies in my future.
Mmmm bacon.
Zed
Mmmm bacon.
Zed
Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
Not really. But the key/my basis for saying that is that what I did was in line with my original plan for rebalancing/AA. I'm about 7 - 10 years from retirement and taking the glide-path approach of bringing my equity percentage down by 1% per year until I hit 50%. I was 1% off that as of the end of last year, so taking these gains now re-set that. I wouldn't have done anything if it were going against my plan.Aptenodytes wrote:That's kind of weird way to approach the rebalancing question isn't it? Any plan for equity returns on a one-year time frame is going to have gigantic error bars. I can't see how it is relevant to anything. But maybe you end up close to the same place you would with conventional rebalancing, in which case don't mess with success.Whatyear? wrote:I'm actualy thinking of doing some off-cycle rebalancing because of the highs. I ended last year about 1% higher in equities than I planned, and so far this year (one month into it) my YTD gains are > than 60% of what I was "planning on" (i.e., assuming a conservative, steady growth rate) for the whole year. So I might take some off the table. I'm only taking a portion of the current year gains, so if the market continues to go up I'm still well in, and if it goes down I'll be glad I took my gains.
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
Thank you. I'm trying to incorporate more humor in my life.Rick Ferri wrote:Ha, ha. Funny guy.How what? Rebalance. And if you don't have commodities in your portfolio...add them:>)
Yes, I agree with rebalancing if it's "time" or equity gains have put your portfolio over a percentage band.
Commodities? Well, that's your call. I'm not smart enough to time the price of wheat or pork belly futures.
Rick Ferri
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
Would be interesting if CXO would break this out at various Shiller PE 10's (like 5-10, 10-15, 15-20, 25-30).
Bet it tells a different story.
RM
Bet it tells a different story.
RM
I figure the odds be fifty-fifty I just might have something to say. FZ
Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
Rick,
What am I going to do? I'm gonna "stay on timeline". Does that bring you back to your 7523 days? If my portfolio indicates a rebalance, then I'll rebalance. If not, then I'll continue to chase the laggards with new monies.
I'm guessing, the 5-year high will incite the greed emotion and the "average" investor will start talking stocks again at social events; they'll start buying equities again, pushing markets even higher. Then later in the year, the institutional investors will sell locking in gains for their end of year statements (leaving the small investor holding the bag - again). As the large money moves outta equities, it needs to go somewhere. Where, well probably into the laggards, pushing them up.
Of course, I could be completely wrong, good thing I don't time markets
Cruncher
What am I going to do? I'm gonna "stay on timeline". Does that bring you back to your 7523 days? If my portfolio indicates a rebalance, then I'll rebalance. If not, then I'll continue to chase the laggards with new monies.
I'm guessing, the 5-year high will incite the greed emotion and the "average" investor will start talking stocks again at social events; they'll start buying equities again, pushing markets even higher. Then later in the year, the institutional investors will sell locking in gains for their end of year statements (leaving the small investor holding the bag - again). As the large money moves outta equities, it needs to go somewhere. Where, well probably into the laggards, pushing them up.
Of course, I could be completely wrong, good thing I don't time markets
Cruncher
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
The 5-year high information has no operational significance, so there's nothing to do.
VT 60% / VFSUX 20% / TIPS 20%
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
Which will take us back to where things stood 10 years ago, meaning zero gain over 10 years. The way I see it, we need to recover everything lost since March 2000, then add at least the rate of inflation to come up with a truly new high...or even with 10 years ago. We then need to start growing at 6 to 8% from there at an annual rate, at a minimum, then folks can talk about whether the market is getting too high.bertilak wrote:Now what?
Root for a 10 year high!
Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
Stocks at a high ... now what? ALL STOCK PORTFOLIOS ... see another thread ... why not!
http://www.bogleheads.org/forum/viewtop ... st=1608964
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Rick - Interesting results on your website. You did state "relatively low volatility" (after a high) .... is weekly 1.5-2 standard deviations low by historic standpoints? It seems to outstrip the cumulative gains over 13 weeks.
http://www.bogleheads.org/forum/viewtop ... st=1608964
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Rick - Interesting results on your website. You did state "relatively low volatility" (after a high) .... is weekly 1.5-2 standard deviations low by historic standpoints? It seems to outstrip the cumulative gains over 13 weeks.
"Owning the stock market over the long term is a winner's game. Attempting to beat the market is a loser's game. ..Don't look for the needle in the haystack. Just buy the haystack." Jack Bogle
- jeffyscott
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
According to m*, growth of $10,000 chart VTSMX has grown by a cumulative 44% since March 2000. Cumulative inflation is about 34% over that time.ResNullius wrote:The way I see it, we need to recover everything lost since March 2000, then add at least the rate of inflation to come up with a truly new high...or even with 10 years ago. We then need to start growing at 6 to 8% from there at an annual rate, at a minimum, then folks can talk about whether the market is getting too high.
I do worry that US stocks are too high, but then I notice bonds are at an all-time high and cash pays next to nothing...and then I also notice that we now have only 17% of assets in US stocks.
Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
How many 5 year highs can you find during the 1980s and 1990s? And how often did the market revert back to those? Make no mistake, it is entirely likely that we will never see these numbers again. Selling now means you likely will either have to stay out of the market for life, or get back in at a higher number. What good would that do?
Last edited by z3r0c00l on Sat Feb 09, 2013 9:29 am, edited 1 time in total.
70% Global Stocks / 30% Bonds
- bertilak
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
Unless you had very little invested in the market 10 years ago.ResNullius wrote:Which will take us back to where things stood 10 years ago...bertilak wrote:Now what?
Root for a 10 year high!
May neither drought nor rain nor blizzard disturb the joy juice in your gizzard. -- Squire Omar Barker (aka S.O.B.), the Cowboy Poet
Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
Rick is just stiring up trouble. Or he is trying to get us to think? I think.
Last edited by mickeyd on Sat Feb 09, 2013 11:54 am, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
When the market reaches a new high, Vanguard changes the Target Retirement allocations.
They did it at least twice at that time including this year.
They did it at least twice at that time including this year.
Unless you try to do something beyond what you have already mastered you will never grow. (Ralph Waldo Emerson)
Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
EternalOptimist wrote:Isn't this where the 'regular folk' come in...buying high
Of course, after selling stocks low in 2007-2008 and moving into bonds. But now I'm missing out on the Great Rotation from bonds to stocks and my bond fund is being decimated (down .5% YTD), and Jeremy Grantham just wrote 'bonds? fugetaboutit' so I need to switch back to stocks...but wait, he said those are overpriced except for Quality stocks, but he won't say which stocks those are! He said to buy potash...is there a potash ETF? Maybe I'll follow Larry's fat tails portfolio, that will keep me safe but make me rich...yummy free lunch...or maybe Harry Browne...or Wellesley, that never loses money...doggone it, when will Vanguard introduce an international gold/potash ETF? (cue headless running chickens).
- jeffyscott
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
Not hard to find out which stocks he is talking about, their portfolios of quality stocks are not exactly a secret, try looking at funds like GMO Quality III, IV, V or VI.rj49 wrote:Jeremy Grantham just wrote 'bonds? fugetaboutit' so I need to switch back to stocks...but wait, he said those are overpriced except for Quality stocks, but he won't say which stocks those are!
You can also find Vanguard funds that emphasize quality, such as Dividend Growth or the similar index from Vanguard.
Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
Why did the market ramp so hard in the 80s and 90s? 80s is when total systemic debt really started to ramp up. 90s is when the internet went mainstream. To simply say the market always goes up without considering why is ignorant. Look at the 2000s. Flat. This current market is entirely pumped up on easy money, HFT, QE, and legalized bank balance sheet fraud. It's no coincidence the rally started with elimination of mark to market.z3r0c00l wrote:How many 5 year highs can you find during the 1980s and 1990s? And how often did the market revert back to those? Make no mistake, it is entirely likely that we will never see these numbers again. Selling now means you likely will either have to stay out of the market for life, or get back in at a higher number. What good would that do?
The stock market is disconnected from the real economy. Is the economy the same as 2000 or 2007 because those are the levels we are at now. [political and economic policy comments removed by admin alex] Someone mentioned insider sales. Why is Schmidt selling almost half of his GOOG shares when GOOG is at an alltime high? You make money selling at the top. Wall Street knows this. They need retail bagholders to sell to which is why you hear nothing on tv except GET IN OR YOU'll MISS THE RIDE. Remember you don't make money until you sell.
- desertbandit442
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
DCA and stay the course. This might be the low for the next five years?
Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
1,552.87 intraday trading March 24, 2000 sp500.
http://www.westegg.com/inflation/infl.cgi
2044 SP500.
as with inflation money has lost one third of its value in 12 years. Things cost 32 percent more now compared 2000 to 2012.
http://data.bls.gov/cgi-bin/cpicalc.pl? ... year2=2012
The government bls one has it at 33 percent. 2000 to 2012, 1 dollar 2000 equals 1.33 dollars in 2012.
So stocks have a way to go to get to real high inflation adjusted versus money illusion.
PS Let me know if I have that right. I have ignored dividends, as its just buying the market at a value, not taking into account dividends that have been paid out in past, and are already gone/sunk.
http://www.westegg.com/inflation/infl.cgi
So the inflation adjusted all time high for sp500 would be circaWhat cost $1552.87 in 2000 would cost $2044.71 in 2012.
Also, if you were to buy exactly the same products in 2012 and 2000,
they would cost you $1552.87 and $1164.51 respectively
2044 SP500.
as with inflation money has lost one third of its value in 12 years. Things cost 32 percent more now compared 2000 to 2012.
.What cost $1 in 2000 would cost $1.32 in 2012.
Also, if you were to buy exactly the same products in 2012 and 2000,
they would cost you $1 and $0.75 respectively
http://data.bls.gov/cgi-bin/cpicalc.pl? ... year2=2012
The government bls one has it at 33 percent. 2000 to 2012, 1 dollar 2000 equals 1.33 dollars in 2012.
So stocks have a way to go to get to real high inflation adjusted versus money illusion.
PS Let me know if I have that right. I have ignored dividends, as its just buying the market at a value, not taking into account dividends that have been paid out in past, and are already gone/sunk.
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
I don't think that is a valid way of looking at it. It's not like you are buying a car, what you are buying is the future returns. So if you never sell it is the opposite, the stream of dividends is what you are buying.LH wrote:I have ignored dividends, as its just buying the market at a value, not taking into account dividends that have been paid out in past, and are already gone/sunk.
However, I think it is pretty bad when the price of stocks has not even matched inflation for such an extended period.
(yes, the cpi calculator indicates 33% cumulative inflation)
From Shiller's monthly data the "real" high was 1968 in 2000.
BTW for $1500 or so you got $16 dividends, $53 earnings in 2000, while today for a similar price you get about $31 dividends, $88 earnings.
Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
I have ignored past dividends, the potential future dividends book value etc etc result in the market price.
Ie it's a price one buys at now, does not include past dividends. needs to be corrected for inflation to compare 2000 price/level to 2013 level
Ie it's a price one buys at now, does not include past dividends. needs to be corrected for inflation to compare 2000 price/level to 2013 level
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
By simple logic, we can discount any analysis that says "Markets are at 5 year highs, therefore they will...". All you need to consider is that if one cannot predict the future when markets ARE NOT at 5 year highs, why should one be able to do so when markets ARE at 5 year highs?Rick Ferri wrote:PS. This is not market timing. I do not time markets. This is a history lesson.
Edit:typo
Last edited by ArthurDent on Fri Feb 15, 2013 1:43 am, edited 1 time in total.
Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
"Be greedy when others are fearful, and fearful when others are greedy."
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
I like this quote.OnFire wrote:"Be greedy when others are fearful, and fearful when others are greedy."
I can't figure out. Are people greedy now or fearful?
I am guessing greedy since people have made profits and want more.
Or are people fearful that the market will go down?
Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
rebalance. stay the course.
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
It is now called the "Great Rotation".
Retail investors in January plowed a record $30 billion into stocks and exchange traded stock funds (ETFs). This is the fastest inflow since 2000.
Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
Since I'm in the accumulation phase it's like hearing that the price of gas is going up (which, in fact, it is). Not much I can do about it.
Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
Do you have any good links to describe the metric in greater detail?Clearly_Irrational wrote:The market is within what I would call the rational range of 10-25 on the Schiller PE10
- Clearly_Irrational
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
It's nothing fancy, just a PE ratio with the earnings averaged over the last ten years. Type "Shiller PE10" into Google and you'll get a ton of links.multivoiced wrote:Do you have any good links to describe the metric in greater detail?Clearly_Irrational wrote:The market is within what I would call the rational range of 10-25 on the Shiller PE10
Here's one I just found: http://turnkeyanalyst.com/2011/10/the-shiller-pe-ratio/
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
I'm just standing here.
Have a plan, stay the course and simplify. Then ignore the noise!
Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
Yeah, same here. A new market high is good for my ego but not for much else...Leif Eriksen wrote:Since I'm in the accumulation phase it's like hearing that the price of gas is going up (which, in fact, it is). Not much I can do about it.
I just bought more stocks but not because I'm trying to chase performance, simply because I needed to do a bit of rebalancing with new money to stay at my target AA.
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
This is just market timing. How do you decide whether greedy is greedy enough. Were people fearful in October 2008? If yes, and you went all in, leveraging to the hilt, would you have gone bankrupt in March 2009?OnFire wrote:"Be greedy when others are fearful, and fearful when others are greedy."
Have a plan and stick to it. Avoid drama.
- Clearly_Irrational
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Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
If I were going to do some timing then:ArthurDent wrote:This is just market timing. How do you decide whether greedy is greedy enough. Were people fearful in October 2008? If yes, and you went all in, leveraging to the hilt, would you have gone bankrupt in March 2009?OnFire wrote:"Be greedy when others are fearful, and fearful when others are greedy."
Have a plan and stick to it. Avoid drama.
Generally a good bet to go all in like that would be after a 50% market crash from peak. So, I'd back up the truck if we went below 7000ish if you use Feb 12th as the high point.
If PE10 went over 30 I'd seriously consider lightening up on equities.
FYI, I don't do this as I consider the timing too difficult to get right consistently.
Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
So.... what are the "laggards"? I can't seem to find anything that has been beat down.Cruncher wrote:Rick,
What am I going to do? I'm gonna "stay on timeline". Does that bring you back to your 7523 days? If my portfolio indicates a rebalance, then I'll rebalance. If not, then I'll continue to chase the laggards with new monies.
I'm guessing, the 5-year high will incite the greed emotion and the "average" investor will start talking stocks again at social events; they'll start buying equities again, pushing markets even higher. Then later in the year, the institutional investors will sell locking in gains for their end of year statements (leaving the small investor holding the bag - again). As the large money moves outta equities, it needs to go somewhere. Where, well probably into the laggards, pushing them up.
Of course, I could be completely wrong, good thing I don't time markets
Cruncher
Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
What do I do now? I know, Money magazine will tell me what to do!! It arrived yesterday!!
What do I do now? I know, Money magazine will tell me what to do!! It arrived yesterday!!
A fool and his money are good for business.
Re: Stocks are at a 5 year high, now what?
I do nothing out of ordinary.