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Priced in Expectations For The S&P 500

Value Expectations's picture




 

The Applied Finance Group's (AFG’s) ability to understand the embedded expectations in stock prices and what a company needs to deliver in revenue growth over the next 5 years in order to justify its current stock price helps investors to better understand whether a company’s expectations are rich or low. When expectations are low companies tend to be more likely to outperform those expectations and outperform their benchmarks. Applying this technique for an entire index is also a good way to tell if the index is over or undervalued as a whole.

By understanding the embedded expectations for growth that companies must deliver to justify their current trading price, clients can develop a “hurdle rate” to quickly determine if the company’s expectations are rich or low.

Below is a chart displaying the implied sales growth (black dotted line) of the entire S&P 500 (INDEXSP:.INX) over the last 12 years as well as the 10 year median sales growth (red line) the index has achieved. This chart also illustrates the forecasted expectations (blue shaded area) for sales growth that the S&P 500 would need to generate in order to justify its current trading level according to the current embedded expectations.

 

Conclusion: When using the Value Expectations framework to solve for the implied sales growth for every company within the S&P 500 (assuming EBITDA and Asset Turns remain constant), we found that the average implied sales growth for the overall index is right around 13%. This is much greater than what the S&P 500 has been able to deliver over the last 10 years (10 year median sales growth for every S&P 500 company is 9.1%) which would suggest the index currently has high expectations.

The following chart displays the relationship between expectations (blue line) and the actual movements of the level of the S&P 500 (red line) over the last 12 years. The theory behind our analysis of embedded expectations and the trend that you can see in the chart below is that when expectations are high (red dots) the subsequent market performance tends to be negative and when expectations are low (blue dot) or reasonable it is much easier for the firm to meet or exceed those expectations and the market tends to follow with positive returns. To gain access to other special studies helping to understand embedded expectations Click Here to receive our weekly newsletter.

Conclusion: The current implied sales growth “priced-in” to the S&P 500 look rich relative to historic levels. Markets tend to experience declines in periods following when expectations are high.

In the final chart we wanted to help readers visualize how the markets have reacted in the past relative to their “priced-in” expectations. We measured the implied sales growth expectations in the beginning of each year (dark blue bar) and then measured the sales growth at the end of the year to see whether or not the index was able to meet or exceed those expectations. The final 3 bars (right side) show what the expectations for sales growth were in the beginning of 2010 (dark blue bar 9.45%) as well as what the street expected for sales growth in 2010 (grey bar 6.45%). The green bar indicates what the current expectations are for sales growth for the S&P 500 over the next 5 years to justify its current level which we mentioned in the first chart. What this illustrates is that in the beginning of 2010 expectations for sales growth were 9.45 percent which was somewhat high relative to historical levels and what the street expectations (6.45%) were to begin the year. Expectations have continued to rise this year with current expectations even loftier than they were to begin 2010.

Conclusion: As the market has rallied over the past few months, the expectations for sales growth have risen and currently look lofty relative to what the S&P 500 has delivered in sales growth historically. Now with such high expectations for the index and the difficulty of timing the unpredictability of the current market, it is increasingly important to focus on finding the best companies within the index using a consistent methodology and reliable framework in your stock selection process. To understand future expectations or embedded expectations on a single company level subscribe to our weekly newsletter.

Related Article:
The “Guru” Report Card – Grading The Picks of the Biggest Names in the Market

 

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Wed, 12/08/2010 - 22:12 | 791147 revenue_anticip...
revenue_anticipation_believer's picture

the idea HERE is, MEANWHILE, WAITING, do sometrading....turns out that you CAN win, can pick up some table scraps, from the Big Guys...so go and play the stock market, BUT put max effort into NOT LOSING...that should take up 99% of your research time...kinda like being a pilot of an airplane...99% anybody can do, sleeper easy....its the 1% you do your training, your hours, your SPECIAL knowledge...

2012 the full deal, YES, the ENTIRE Political/Economic MetaStructure 'collapses' into looting/rioting/total 'uncontrol', for a while..worst extreme, right? eh?,

not quite, we have been there, already...RECENTLY...During the Vietnam War Sideshow, right up to 1984...starting about 1964...while building the 'coverstory' man on the moon project, USA/USSR were both developing the Military Side...missile silos, MX missiles on rail road cars continously mobile

...and FINALLY the M.A.D. logical breaking point..1984 ?? the German Nuclear Tipped Missiles USA missiles...pointed at USSR Targets - not just Russia...did you FORGET?? you never knew??  

...missiles in Germany...500 miles at suborbital 18,000 miles/hour...lets see Oh, about 2 minutes to target destruction...'LAUNCH ON WARN' made M.A.D. logically impossible the last shread of 'rationally fought nuclear war...' gone...

Well, basically THAT blew up the entire LOGIC of M.A.D. which was simple, as in Doctor Strangelove please review...which WAS that it takes TIME for THEIR missiles/airplanes to transit to the USA, time enought to EVALUATE and RETAILIATE...

BUT

1984+ Iceland..the 'Agreement' with USA/USSR to back off, and KEEP backing off, EVEN more than the professional criminals who pretended to diplomatically  negotiate cutbacks...etc..USA/RUSSIA abolished whole classes of nuclear weapons that WERE READY TO GO...and then some...the solid fuel missiles in North Dakota, Arizona...and more...

http://www.google.com/search?aq=f&sourceid=chrome&ie=UTF-8&q=doctor+strangelove+wiki

http://www.google.com/search?aq=2&oq=doctor+strangelove&sourceid=chrome&...

so, YOU are Afraid? really...no, if when the worst happens, HAVE YOUR....

 

 

Wed, 12/08/2010 - 14:46 | 789434 kubrick007
kubrick007's picture

the fact that everyone believes that fundamentals are of the past makes this an excellent time for people with a long-term valuation approach. the high-frequency trading probably helps this also by increasing short-term volatility and shaking out weak hands and allowing for mispriced equities. for HFT to significantly affect long-term returns remains to be seen.  

 

that being said, i'm having difficulty finding good names to buy.  

Wed, 12/08/2010 - 20:00 | 790828 bmcclureinv
bmcclureinv's picture

i hear that

Wed, 12/08/2010 - 14:43 | 789417 John Law Lives
John Law Lives's picture

How long will it be before Robo posts a chart showing stock pricing gains... or before Harry tells us how great things are in the "real" economy...

Permabull Droid Alert:  Countdown begins now...

 

Wed, 12/08/2010 - 13:51 | 789259 Vampyroteuthis ...
Vampyroteuthis infernalis's picture

As those HFTs rob the market, it has less liquidity everyday. The market is worth way less than the leveraged estimates in the article. Fundamentals are something of the past.

Wed, 12/08/2010 - 13:48 | 789247 StockWorldNews
StockWorldNews's picture

Bernanke dreams of DOW 40,000

Wed, 12/08/2010 - 13:14 | 789149 Racer
Racer's picture

Ah but computers don't trade in funnymentals.. that is about things so far waaaaaaay ahead in the future beyond nanoseconds that they are irrelevant

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