Picking stocks in a bull market is so easy the GEICO caveman could do it. After all, when the broader market indices, like the S&P 500, trade at average price-to-earnings (P/E) and price-to-sales ratios (P/S) of 24.4 and 2.2, respectively, just about every stock in the index is rising. #-ad_banner-#Of course, buying a market with such high multiples is fraught with danger. Both ratios are at extreme levels. In fact, the sales-to-price ratio is at its all-time high. What’s An Investor To Do? Investors really have two options to deal with an overpriced and volatile market. First is to… Read More
Picking stocks in a bull market is so easy the GEICO caveman could do it. After all, when the broader market indices, like the S&P 500, trade at average price-to-earnings (P/E) and price-to-sales ratios (P/S) of 24.4 and 2.2, respectively, just about every stock in the index is rising. #-ad_banner-#Of course, buying a market with such high multiples is fraught with danger. Both ratios are at extreme levels. In fact, the sales-to-price ratio is at its all-time high. What’s An Investor To Do? Investors really have two options to deal with an overpriced and volatile market. First is to sell their positions and move to interest-bearing securities. And while this may have worked in the past, moving money into bonds and preferred stock is actually more dangerous than the stock market right now. You see, the Fed intends to raise interest rates at least two more times — possibly three — in 2018. And because bond prices are inverse to interest rates, when interest rates go up, bond prices go down. It’s the opposite of what happened in 1983 when interest rates started falling. It fueled a bond rally that lasted more than three decades. But that rally created… Read More