Trump astride most over-valued stock market

President Trump comes back to office amid one of the most over-valued stock markets of all time, even more inflated than at President Hoover’s inauguration months before the Black Tuesday crash of 1929. See WSJ: Make America Cheap Again. The CAPE is just one of a long list of historically prescient indicators ringing alarm bells.

Of all the measures of irrational equity market pricing, the cyclically adjusted price to earnings ratio (CAPE) developed by Yale economist Robert Shiller, since it looks back a decade and adjusts for inflation. On that basis, American stocks are 83% more expensive than when Bill Clinton first took the oath of office, 145% more than when Barack Obama first did and a whopping four times Ronald Reagan’s starting point. They even are a third pricier than at the start of Trump’s own first term.

Nothing matters more to long-term equity returns over the next decade than the level of fundamental valuation at the starting point. Today, bullish high hopes meet elevated multiples that suggest negative annual returns over the next 7 years or more.

Asset manager GMO recently forecast that the return of U.S. large capitalization stocks will be negative 5.2% annually over the next seven years after inflation. It would be like putting money into a CD today and having the bank pocket almost a third of it when it matures in 2032.

With U.S. stock markets the most widely held globally, their prospects magnify downside risk for consumer and investor sentiment worldwide. For those who manage not to go down with this ship, however, the opportunity embedded on the other side of present euphoria has also rarely been greater.

 …when indexes like the S&P 500 become cheaper, which they surely will, investors should look past gloomy headlines and see the glass as half full since it will mean a better rate of return.

If a rough patch for U.S. markets is what it takes for that imbalance to right itself then it would be small solace to retirees, much less to President Trump. Those still in their saving years, though, might find that it is the pause that refreshes their nest eggs.

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DoubleLine Round Table 2025

More moving parts than usual in 2025…For a few new ones, see Everything to Know about Trump’s Use of Executive Orders. The discussion below further elucidates.

During the macroeconomic segment of Round Table Prime’s 2025 edition, participants, among other issues, deliberate the future path of inflation, premature Trump administration assumptions at the Federal Reserve, the hidden but deepening distress of the U.S. consumer, the transformational unknowns of artificial intelligence and an awakening among Americans to their political class having abandoned them. Held Jan. 9 at DoubleLine’s downtown L.A. office. Here is a direct video link.

Here is Part Two.

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Balance sheet recessions take years to repair

The winds of change are blowing around the globe.

74 countries representing half of the world’s population held national elections last year.

Many of them — including the US — saw a replacement of the ruling incumbent by the opposition, often one promising a more nationalistic agenda.

With so many new leaders and their accompanying new policies, what is the outlook for the global economy and financial markets in 2025?

To discuss, we have the great fortune of speaking today with Richard Koo, Chief Economist at the Nomura Research Institute as well as author of numerous best-selling books on economics.Here is a direct video link.

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