STOCKS ARE CHEAP, BUT THIS METRIC DOESN’T
WORK?<http://pragcap.com/stocks-are-cheap-but-this-metric-doesnt-work>
30 August 2010 by TPC 15 Comments

I’ll be frank – I have a special place in my heart for the PE ratio and it
is the same place where all the things I hate are stored.  This simple to
understand metric has, in my opinion, resulted in more misguided Wall
Street<http://pragcap.com/stocks-are-cheap-but-this-metric-doesnt-work#>thinking
than just about any metric in existence.  A quick glance at the
breakdown of the PE ratio shows serious flaws at work here.  It is basically
a moving price target (which is never correct unless you still believe in
EMH) divided by the earnings estimates that are created by analysts who have
literally no idea where future earnings will be.  In other words, you might
as well pick random numbers out of a hat and divide them and then go buy or
sell stocks.  Naturally, proponents of the PE ratio will say that you
shouldn’t use forward PE’s, but to those people I have to respond: do you
always drive through your rear view mirror?  The numerator (or market price
in the PE equation) could care less about past earnings so it’s less than
helpful in telling us where future prices might go.

What disgusts me even more about this metric is its incessant use in selling
buy and hold strategies.  You can’t read a book on value investing or buy
and hold without running into the PE ratio.   “The market is cheap –
stocks<http://pragcap.com/stocks-are-cheap-but-this-metric-doesnt-work#>for
the long-run!”  You’ve probably seen this slogan on every mutual fund
pamphlet you’ve ever read.  Your stock broker no doubt thinks the market is
“cheap” right now.  The PE ratio has become the sales pitch of an entire
generation of sales people who are just herding small investors into fee
based products.  “Did you know Warren Buffet is a value investor?”  “Just
buy cheap stocks and hang on.  Your status on the list of the world’s
richest is in the making!”  Or so goes the old sales pitch.

So, I wasn’t surprised to open Yahoo Finance this morning to  see the
following headline arguing that stocks are cheap according to the PE ratio.
But just two articles down is an article from the WSJ arguing that the PE
ratio doesn’t work in this environment.  You can’t make this stuff up.
According to the article:

“Not only is the P/E ratio dropping, it also is in danger of losing some of
its prominence as a market gauge.”

Losing its prominence?  The only reason this metric ever gained prominence
was in large part due to the Wall Street sales machine that has spent the
last 25 years selling the idea of buy and hold to a generation of investors
who thought they were on their way to becoming the next Warren Buffett.
Unfortunately, investors like to latch onto what’s simple. Few things are
easier to understand in the complex world of investing than the PE ratio.

I generally adhere to the slogan: “you know less than you think you know”.
And I consider myself a pretty savvy investor.  I understand the
complexities of monetary theory, I’ve traded just about every instrument
under the sun, I have seen the inner workings of Wall Street’s slimiest
firms, I’ve been lucky enough to outperform the markets for years on end and
yet I still am consistently humbled by the markets.  I certainly know less
than I think I know.  In the case of your average Main Street investor you
know *less than less than* you think you know.  This idea that anyone can
become the next great investor is like me walking into a Harvard Law class
and proclaiming that I can talk, therefore, I am the second coming of Johnny
Cochran.  It’s just not that simple.  Yet, the sales pitch continues and the
small investor continues to eat up the dream…

The PE ratio is certainly simple.  In fact, it’s too simple.  Buying stocks
or convincing yourself that the market is “cheap” based on the results of
two incorrect moving targets is not only a recipe for disaster, but it’s
sheer lunacy in my opinion.  The contradicting headlines above show just
what a confused and bewildering place Wall Street is to begin with.  I can
only imagine what your average Main Street investor is beginning to think of
this place we call “Wall Street”.

Trying to dumb down a system as complex as the market only misleads small
investors into believing that they can swim with the sharks without being
eaten.  The PE ratio has only helped herd more and more small investors into
equities with the belief that they too can become the next Warren Buffett.
But hey, where will Wall Street be if the little guy ever figures out that
Wall Street might not be the right place for their money?   Wall Street
might actually shrink.  This unproductive facet of the US economy might
actually sink back to the meager corner that it once maintained.  And while
that might be a bad thing for the big banks it would likely be great for the
long-term productivity of the US economy and the wealth of Main Street
citizens – all of whom are invested in the United States though not
necessarily in the form of Wall Street products.

-- 
Best Regards,
Jay Shah, FRM

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