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Is the Stock Market Too High?
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Federal Reserve Chairman
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Alan Greenspan briefly shook world financial markets a couple of weeks ago with
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a single question: "How do we know when irrational exuberance has unduly
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escalated asset values?" Traders interpreted Greenspan's delicate rhetorical
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query, made during a speech at a conservative think tank, to imply that he
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believed the stock market was overvalued, and that the Federal Reserve might be
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about to increase interest rates in order to lower stock prices. So investors
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bailed out, pushing stock prices down by between 2 percent and 4 percent.
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Federal Reserve officials then hastened to assure the press that a rise in
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interest rates was not in the offing, and that Greenspan's expressions of
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concern were merely expressions of concern.
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Is the
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stock market too high? If so, what--if anything--should the Federal Reserve do
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about it? The stakes for investors are enormous. The current value of
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publicly traded stocks on U.S. markets is about $7 trillion. If those
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stocks are overvalued by, say, a third, more than $2 trillion of the wealth
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Americans hold in stocks is likely to vanish if and when stock prices return to
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their fundamental values . "Fundamental values" is a concept easier to
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define in theory than in practice. It refers to the prices stocks ought to sell
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for based on businesses' real economic value, apart from speculation. The
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assumption is that stock prices will ultimately (whenever that is) return to
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their fundamental values, however much extraneous factors may be influencing
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them at the moment.
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No one disputes that stock prices are very high . One
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standard measure of "fundamentals" is average earnings over the past 10
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years, a period considered long enough for business-cycle fluctuations to
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average out. In a typical year, a typical stock is priced at about 15 times its
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10-year average of earnings. Today the typical stock sells for nearly 30 times
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its 10-year average of earnings.
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The
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argument that the stock market is overvalued--and that it will either gradually
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deflate or crash--is simple. Stocks are tradable pieces of paper that are
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merely a claim on a corporation's future earnings. And the ratio of stock price
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to earnings is twice what it traditionally has been. In the past, whenever
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general stock prices have gotten as high relative to fundamentals as they are
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today, the next decade has been an extremely bad one in which to invest in the
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stock market.
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However, optimists offer three main theories
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why current stock prices are not too high.
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First: Some claim that
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information technology is ushering in a generation-long economic boom.
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Past rule-of-thumb valuations based on earnings and dividends assume that
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economic and profit growth will continue in the future at roughly the pace it
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did in the past. But (the argument goes), because we are on the threshold of
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the postindustrial transformation, economic growth--and earnings growth, and
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dividend growth, and stock-price growth--will be faster than in the past.
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Second: Others claim that
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the rate of return that the average investor expects to receive on
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stocks has fallen. That would mean that any given level of profit can sustain a
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higher stock price. In the past, demand for stocks was limited by fear of
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risk . Investors could look to the bond market and see the chance for a
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decent return with total safety. But (the argument goes) the 1970s inflation
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taught investors the brutal lesson that there is no safety in bonds: Your
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investment can evaporate if interest rates rise, or if inflation devalues the
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bonds' purchasing power. Investors today also have less fear of the business
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cycle and other risks associated with stocks. So investors are willing to pay
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more for stocks than they used to.
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Third:
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Over the past generation, corporations have learned better how to avoid paying
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taxes. Some companies have pushed up their debt-equity ratios --raising
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more money through bonds and less through stocks--and thus changed payments (to
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investors) that used to be called "dividends" into "interest." Dividends are
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paid out of post-tax earnings, whereas debt interest is a tax-deductible
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business expense. Other companies have decided to buy back shares with
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money that would otherwise have been paid out in dividends. The money
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shareholders receive in this way is taxed as a capital gain, usually at a lower
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rate, whereas dividends are taxed as ordinary income. Furthermore, investors
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can choose whether to participate in the buyback or to hold onto their shares
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and defer taxes completely. All these various tax techniques make shares of
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stock more valuable, per dollar of corporate earnings, than previously.
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The only correct answer to the question, "Is the stock
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market too high?" is: "No one knows." J.P. Morgan, the turn-of-the-century
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financier, had a stock answer for people who asked him what the stock market
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would do: "It will fluctuate." At the peak of every previous bull market, there
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have been experts and prognosticators declaring that the old rules of thumb are
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no longer valid. The most famous of these predictions came just before the
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stock-market crash of 1929, when Yale Professor Irving Fisher reassured
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investors that stock prices had attained a "permanently high plateau." But
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every time--until now--what had gone up has come down.
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What if
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the stock market is too high? What if it is indeed undergoing what Greenspan
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calls "irrational exuberance"? This is a bad thing because the exuberance may
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end in a crash , and the crash may depress the general economy. It's not
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inevitable. The decline in prices to their "fundamental" level may be gradual,
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and even a crash may not turn into a larger economic disaster. When stock
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prices fell by a quarter in one day in 1987, the American economy barely
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noticed, thanks largely to quick action by Greenspan's Federal Reserve. Even
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so, it is better to avoid the crash-causing exuberance than it is to try to
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keep a crash from triggering a depression.
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So if the stock market is overvalued, what
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should the Fed do? One answer is: nothing . The history of central
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bank attempts to deflate overvalued stock prices is not encouraging. The Fed's
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efforts to cool off stock prices in 1929 had no impact on the stock market, but
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it did start the depression it had hoped to avoid. The Fed's principal
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stock-deflating tool is an increase in interest rates, which draws money out of
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stocks and into bonds. But raising interest rates now (which would depress the
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economy now) to avoid a possible financial crisis (which would depress the
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economy later) is a lot like destroying the village in order to save it.
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A second answer is that the
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Fed can express concern , as Greenspan did. Such expressions might subtly
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shift market psychology and begin the gradual deflation. The risk is that the
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shift in market psychology might not be subtle, and the deflation might not be
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gradual. Note how gingerly Greenspan expressed his "concern." He did not say
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that he was worried because the stock market was overvalued: He asked how he
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could figure out whether the stock market was overvalued. He did not say that
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he would take any action in response to overvaluation: He asked if monetary
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policy should be any different if there were overvaluation.
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It is hard to imagine a
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smaller step than the one Greenspan took.
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