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The Stock Market Has Crossed This Dubious Threshold 6 Times in 155 Years -- and History Couldn't Be Clearer What Comes Next
For much of the last seven years, the stock market has been unstoppable. The benchmark S&P 500 (^GSPC 0.61%) has gained at least 16% for three consecutive years on three occasions throughout its nearly century-long history. Two of those streaks have occurred over the last seven years (2019-2021 and 2023-2025).
Meanwhile, we’ve watched the iconic Dow Jones Industrial Average (^DJI 0.26%) reach 50,000 and the growth-stock-driven Nasdaq Composite (^IXIC 0.93%) briefly top 24,000.
Stocks have been fueled by game-changing innovation, such as the artificial intelligence (AI) revolution and the advent of quantum computing, as well as historic share buyback activity by S&P 500 companies.
But when things seem too good to be true on Wall Street, they typically are.
Image source: Getty Images.
Although the stock market is a time-tested wealth-creating machine (something I’ll touch on in more detail later), it’s also historically expensive. Based on what 155 years of history show, the party may be nearing an end.
The stock market is historically expensive – and that’s bad news for investors
To preface the following discussion, “value” is subjective. What one investor believes is pricey might be viewed as a bargain by another.
Nevertheless, one time-tested valuation tool has historically done a phenomenal job of pushing beyond this subjectivity. The metric in question is the S&P 500’s Shiller Price-to-Earnings (P/E) Ratio, which is also referred to as the Cyclically Adjusted P/E Ratio (CAPE Ratio).
The Shiller P/E is based on average inflation-adjusted earnings over the previous 10 years. That compares with the traditional P/E ratio (the go-to valuation metric for most investors), which accounts only for trailing 12-month earnings. Whereas recessions or shock events easily trip up the P/E ratio, the CAPE Ratio remains useful.
S&P 500 Shiller CAPE Ratio data by YCharts.
Although economists didn’t introduce the Shiller P/E until the late 1980s, it’s been back-tested to January 1871. Over 155 years, it’s averaged 17.35.
But as you’ll note, it’s spent much of the last 30 years above this mark. Lower interest rates and the internet revolution, which broke down information barriers between Wall Street and Main Street that had existed for more than a century, paved the way for greater risk-taking by retail investors.
Over the last five months, the S&P 500’s CAPE Ratio has danced between 39 and 41, marking the second-priciest stock market in history. It’s also the sixth instance in 155 years where the Shiller P/E has exceeded 30 for at least a two-month period.
Although a Shiller P/E of 30 is an arbitrary line in the sand, history shows that it represents trouble for Wall Street. Here’s how the major stock indexes have performed when this threshold has been crossed:
A Shiller P/E above 30 has foreshadowed an eventual 20% (or greater) pullback in one or more of Wall Street’s major indexes every time over 155 years.
The one caveat to this data is that the Shiller P/E offers investors no assistance in determining when the music will stop. Sometimes, pricey markets last for mere months. On other occasions, such as during the dot-com era, stocks remained historically expensive for more than four years. Although we don’t know precisely when a significant decline will begin, history couldn’t be clearer that a 20% or greater drop is expected.
Image source: Getty Images.
History is a pendulum that favors long-term optimists
While historical correlations with the Shiller P/E point to the possibility of significant declines in the Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, and Nasdaq Composite, history is a pendulum that swings both directions on Wall Street and overwhelmingly favors investors who maintain perspective and exercise patience.
On the one hand, stock market corrections, bear markets, and even those feared elevator-down moves are normal, healthy, and inevitable. Think of these events as the price of admission for investing in the greatest wealth creator on the planet.
But what’s most important to recognize about these declines is that they’re often short-lived. Stock market cycles aren’t linear, which is a powerful realization for long-term-minded investors.
Recently, market research firm Bespoke Investment Group published a data set on X (formerly Twitter) that analyzed the length of every S&P 500 bull and bear market dating back to the start of the Great Depression (September 1929). What researchers found was overwhelming evidence supporting optimists.
Bespoke’s data shows that the average of 27 bear markets has lasted just 286 calendar days (approximately 9.5 months), with none surpassing 630 calendar days.
On the flipside, the typical S&P 500 bull market has endured for 1,011 calendar days since September 1929, with 10 of these bull markets lasting at least 1,200 calendar days. The average bull market is 3.5 times longer than the typical bear market.
This data demonstrates that every significant downturn in the Dow, S&P 500, and Nasdaq Composite represents an opportunity for long-term-minded investors to pounce with confidence.