The Denver Post

Despite years of market successes, investors still worry about the next crash

- By Stan Choe

What is the sound of a stock market at a record high and nobody buying it?

Even with stocks in the midst of one of their best-ever runs, investors are on pace to pull more money out of U.S. stock funds than they put in for the third straight year and the eighth in the last 10 years.

The memory of the financial crisis from 2007 into 2009 is still too fresh for many investors, who watched stock prices plunge by more than half. After many sat out the ensuing, torrid rise for the market — the Standard & Poor’s 500 index has more than tripled since hitting bottom — they’re now wondering if the next crash is imminent.

“It’s still one of the first things that comes up” when Brian Jacobsen, chief portfolio strategist at Wells Fargo Funds Management, talks with clients and even some friends. “The question is: ‘When is the bubble going to burst?’ I’ve been hearing that since 2012.”

Another reason for caution: America’s increasing­ly wrinkled complexion. Baby boomers may be getting more conservati­ve with their nest eggs and putting more money into bonds as they approach or move further into retirement.

Through the first seven months of this year, investors pulled a net $8 billion out of U.S. stock funds. The figures from the Investment Company Institute include index mutual funds and ETFS, whose popularity have boomed in recent years, as well as funds run by stock pickers looking to beat the S&P 500 and other indexes.

That hesitance to invest comes even as stocks have attained new highs in a mostly gentle ride upward. The S&P 500 has set a record more than 30 times in 2017, with only a few big down days, due in part to a resurgence in corporate-profit growth. Companies themselves remain big purchasers of U.S. stocks, and foreign investors also have been buying some.

The general skittishne­ss about stocks is actually an encouragin­g sign to some on Wall Street, particular­ly those who follow famed investor John Templeton’s maxim that “bull markets are born on pessimism, grow on skepticism, mature on optimism and die on euphoria.” There are indeed many reasons to worry, the market’s high price chief among them, but at least there doesn’t seem to be any euphoria. If all the potential buyers that remain get lured into the fold, then it would be time to get worried, the contrarian­s say.

Strategist­s at Goldman Sachs say investors are currently between skepticism and optimism.

The skeptics have honed in on how stock prices have risen more quickly than corporate earnings in recent years, which means they look more expensivel­y valued than usual. One measure popularize­d by Nobel prize-winner Robert Shiller says that the S&P 500 is at its most expensive level since 2001. Not only that, but interest rates are expected to rise, which theoretica­lly should lower how much investors will pay for each $1 in corporate profits. Throw in the wild card that is Washington politics, and investors are feeling unmoored.

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