However, John Hussman does not think the worst is over. In his latest article, he wrote: “Let’s be clear. October’s market decline was a rather mild warning shot.”
“The advance of recent years has produced a toxic combination of extreme valuations in every conventional asset class, coupled with a breathtaking mountain of low-grade debt issued by Wall Street...to satisfy the yield-seeking speculative demand of investors,” he said.
For US stocks in particular, Hussman said that valuations based on “our Margin-Adjusted CAPE, which is substantially better correlated with actual subsequent market returns than Robert Shiller’s raw cyclically-adjusted P/E...have retreated only to the level they reached in November 2017, matched in history only by the 3 weeks surrounding the 1929 market peak”.
While valuations are informative about long-term returns but less so about short term trends, Hussman also noted that market internals, a measure of investor inclination towards speculation or risk-aversion, “shifted to a negative condition on February 2, and have remained unfavorable since then”.
“Presently, neither valuations nor internals are favorable, and that is what opens up a trap door under the market,” he said.
“Over the completion of the current market cycle, I fully expect the S&P 500 to lose close to two-thirds of its value from the recent peak,” he warned.
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