The Borneo Post (Sabah)

As Wall Street surges, more are worried about valuation

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NEW YORK: The US stock market’s surge since the election has reignited a debate on valuation and whether the market can go higher still after hitting some significan­t milestones.

The Dow on Wednesday soared above 21,000 points for the first time following President Donald Trump’s first major address to Congress.

After pulling back on Thursday, stocks tentativel­y resumed the upward climb on Friday, finishing slightly higher.

Analysts say Trump’s more conciliato­ry tone during his Tuesday night congressio­nal address lifted hopes he will win approval for tax cuts and other growth measures strongly backed by the market.

Market watchers also are heartened by improving US data on jobs, consumer confidence and service sector activity.

That better economic data has permitted investors to bid stocks higher in spite of red flags on Trump’s approach to trade, immigratio­n, foreign policy and other issues.

Still, some analysts suspect the market is near a top.

“When you look at valuations today, it’s hard to see it going up eight or 10 per cent unless earnings go up a lot,” said David Levy, portfolio manager at Republic Wealth Advisors.

“On a short-term basis, the market is extremely overbought.” Many market watchers assess valuation with the priceto-earnings ratio, a benchmark of total market capitalisa­tion to earnings.

That ratio now stands at almost 30, its highest level since 2002 following a 12 per cent rise in the S&P 500 since the election.

“The best argument for avoiding US stocks is simple: valuation,” Nicholas Colas, chief market strategist at the Convergex brokerage, said in a note earlier this week.

Colas’ analysis looked at the S P 500’s performanc­e since 2002, concluding that while the seven per cent annual growth rate lagged the increase over a longer period of time, it was still “nicely positive”.

But those gains were made possible in large part due to low interest rates enacted after the 2008 financial crisis.

Current low interest rates are a main reason “we are not in a bubble territory or anything of the sort,” investor Warren Buffett told CNBC earlier this week.

“Measured against interest rates, stocks actually are on the cheap side compared to historic valuations,” Buffett said. — AFP

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