One measure shows the stock market is still affordable at current levels - but investors should avoid these 3 bubble-like pockets, Goldman Sachs says
- Fear of a large-scale market bubble might be overblown, though certain pockets do exhibit bubble-like qualities, Goldman Sachs strategists said Friday.
- When taking interest rates and Treasury yields into account, the broad market isn't as extremely valued as other gauges suggest, the team said.
- SPACs, negative-earning stocks, and high-growth, high-multiple stocks are showing behavior consistent with bubble-like sentiment, they added.
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Concerns of stock-market bubbles aren't misplaced, but certain gauges suggest the broader market has plenty more room to run, Goldman Sachs strategists said Friday.
Major indexes sit just below record highs as investors bet on vaccine distribution and additional stimulus to accelerate economic recovery. Yet still-elevated COVID-19 case counts and worsening economic data has led some clients to wonder whether stocks' valuations are unsustainable, the team led by David Kostin said in a note to clients.
By some of the most popular valuation metrics, the market sits at extremely lofty levels. Price-to-earnings and market cap-to-GDP ratios both point to unusually high valuations.
However, accounting for historically low Treasury yields and interest rates, the S&P 500 is actually trading at a "below-average historical valuation," Goldman said. Treasurys remain at relatively low levels after plummeting at the start of the pandemic. Similarly, interest rates sit at record lows and are expected to remain there for the medium-term.
Using the popular cyclically adjusted P/E ratio, or CAPE, the broader market's valuation isn't as low as many think, the strategists added.
A falling equity-risk premium will offset rising yields and "modestly higher" real rates throughout 2021, the bank added. Goldman reiterated its year-end S&P 500 target of 4,300, implying a 12% rally from Friday's closing level.
Beware the bubbles
Still, certain parts of the market are to be avoided, the team said. For one, last year's obsession with special-purpose acquisition companies has shown no signs of calming. More than $16 billion has been raised across 56 SPACs in the year-to-date, handily exceeding the pace that saw a record $76 billion raised in 2020. Yet the SPAC offering spree is conditional on every blank-check firm finding a private company to merge with.
Low interest rates and SPACs' two-year window for finding target companies suggest their popularity can persist, but investor behavior in the sector has been "consistent with bubble-like sentiment," Goldman said.
Recent rallies of stocks boasting negative earnings also spark concerns of a potential market bubble, the team added. Companies with negative long-term earnings have outpaced the average stock by 40 percentage points over the last 12 months, according to the bank. Elevated trading of negative earners has also been a "historical extreme."
While investors should steer clear of the group, the phenomenon and its risks are mostly contained, the strategists said.
"Although this surge appears unsustainable, it also appears to pose little risk to the broad market because these companies account for just 5% of total market cap," they added.
Finally, high-growth, high-multiple stocks have traded with elevated volumes and, unlike the aforementioned groups, could pose a risk to the broader market, the team said. Equities with enterprise value-to-sales multiples of more than 20 made up roughly 23% of trading volumes in the past month and count as 9% of the stock market.
Some of the group's appreciation can be linked to low interest rates, but history suggests these extremely valued stocks will underperform the median US stock and broader market indexes over the next 12 months, Goldman said.
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