Buffett and Barclays Market Indicators Send Warning to Stock Bulls

Buffett and Barclays Market Indicators Send Warning to Stock Bulls

Buffett and Barclays Market Indicators Send Warning to Stock Bulls

Warren Buffett
Warren Buffett

The US stock market has roared past every caution sign on its way to a dizzying 36% surge since the April lows. It’s now staring down one favored by investing legend Warren Buffett.

The “Buffett Indicator,” an imperfect but useful metric for assessing whether equity valuations have become bloated, has risen past its pandemic-era record that preceded 2022’s bear market. The measure pits total market capitalization of US stocks, currently at around $72 trillion, against gross domestic product. These days, it shows the stock market is more than twice the size of the economy, even after GDP grew at the fastest pace in nearly two years.

Most Read from Bloomberg

“The current ratio naturally suggests equities are overvalued and echoes concerns about bubble-like behavior,” Barclays derivatives strategists including Stefano Pascale said in a note to clients. Even though the indicator isn’t without limitations, it’s “still prudent for investors to consider the record stock market capitalization-to-GDP ratio as another warning sign of excessive euphoria.”

The Barclays team earlier this year introduced its own gauge to measure euphoria in the market using options data going back to 1997. Conceived as the AI revolution was minting billions in value for a handful of big tech firms and comparisons to the dot-com bubble of the late 1990s abounded, the idea was to help investors watch for stretched positioning and signs of irrational exuberance.

They found that their indicator tends to mimic moves in the Buffett Indicator, and now it’s flashing similar warnings. It measures the proportion of euphoric stocks within a universe of US equities that have liquid options, currently around 11%, compared with its long-term average of 7.1%. The gauge peaked above 10% during the dot-com era of the late 1990s and the meme-stock frenzy of 2021.

Concerns about market froth have persisted for months as price-to-earnings ratios in the S&P 500 have climbed to levels achieved only before past meltdowns. Bears have also warned that a cooling labor market and signs of stress among lower-end consumers mean the US economy is on shaky footing. Still, companies have continued to deliver solid earnings and artificial intelligence spending has boosted economic activity.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *