If you look deeply into a speculative bubble, you can see the market collapse in it. If you look deeply into a market collapse, you can see the bull market in it. Each is a continuation of the other.| Hussman Funds
On Friday December 6th, the U.S. stock market pushed to the most extreme level of valuation in U.S. history, based on the measures that we find best-correlated with subsequent S&P 500 total returns, as well as the depth of subsequent losses over the completion of market cycles across a century of data. That’s not a forecast. Rather, it’s a statement about current, measurable, observable market conditions.| Hussman Funds
Change is the sum of fundamental trends, the gradual elimination of accumulated extremes, and the random arrival of new shocks. This is true for nearly every process, including economic growth and stock market returns.| Hussman Funds
The heady optimism in forecasted earnings is hiding in aggressive expectations for profit margins. The rise in market valuations has been much more tightly linked to those elevated margins - and expectations for even higher margins next year and the year after - than investors may realize. If the widely held belief that public companies will perpetually become more profitable begins to falter, the steep valuation premium that has been priced into U.S. large-cap stocks over the past decade may...| Hussman Funds
I may as well just say it. Based on the present combination of extreme valuations, unfavorable and deteriorating market internals, and a rare preponderance of warning syndromes in weekly and now daily data, my impression is that the speculative market advance since 2009 ended last week. Barring a wholesale shift in the quality of market internals, which are quickly going the wrong way, any further highs from these levels are likely to be minimal. In contrast, current valuation extremes imply ...| Hussman Funds
There are certain features of valuation, investor psychology, and price behavior that tend to emerge when the fear of missing out becomes particularly extreme and the focus of speculation becomes particularly narrow. On Friday, May 24, we hit a fresh “motherlode” of these conditions.| Hussman Funds
Statistically, the current set of market conditions looks more “like” a major bull market peak than any point in the past 75 years, and I suspect, any point other than the 1929 peak. As Jeremy Grantham recently observed, "This is where you start bear markets from."| Hussman Funds