The stock market is entering ‘Crazy Town’ as valuations reach generational high, Stifel says

iStock; Rebecca Zisser/BI
  • Stock market valuations are near generational highs, Stifel’s Barry Bannister says.

  • Bannister predicts the S&P 500 could rise to the low-6,000s before plummeting back down.

  • He said the market is a “mania” with valuations near 80-year highs.

The stock market is “entering Crazy Town” as valuations creep toward generational highs, Stifel’s chief equity strategist Barry Bannister said on Thursday.

His comments come a day after the stock market soared to record highs following Donald Trump’s election win, with the Dow Jones surging greater than 1,500 points and the Nasdaq gaining nearly 3%.

Bannister said current market valuations are pricing in an incredibly optimistic scenario that could lead on to disappointment for investors.

“Even allowing for the best-case scenario of a U.S. soft landing, and despite a possible ramp higher for U.S. fiscal spending, in addition to China global cyclical stimulus and lastly a geopolitical ‘reckoning’, the S&P 500 is a mania, nearing a 3-generation valuation high,” Bannister said.

Bannister added that while he expects the S&P 500 to succeed in “the low-6,000s” within the short term, such a move higher would end in valuations hitting 80-year highs, as measured by the cyclically adjusted S&P 500 CAPE earnings yield.

“The Earnings Yield (EPS/Price) is near the three% low for the whole post-WW2 (since 1945) 3-generation period,” Bannister said.

In line with Bannister, the intense overvaluation suggests that even when the S&P 500 continues to rise just a few percentage points to the low 6,000s within the short term, it’s ripe for a 1,000-point decline, or about 13%, inside a 12 months or so.

“If S&P 500 tracks a century of manias it pops to low-6,000s in 4Q24 then round-trips to ~5,250 fair value” by early 2026, Bannister said.

The S&P 500 traded at 5,965 Thursday afternoon.

Ultimately, Bannister believes that current stock market sentiment is nearing the purpose that typically marks the top of a bull expansion. Quoting the famed British investor Sir John Templeton, he added:

“Bull markets are born on pessimism, grown on skepticism, mature on optimism, and die on euphoria.”

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