What is the Future Path for Fair Value on the S&P 500? - Real Time Insight
September 20 2012 - 10:41AM
Zacks
I read this lead-in quote from a respected
sell-side firm on Monday. I have been thinking about the
equity implications of it all week.
"Our forecast that S&P 500 valuation
would remain flat during 2012 given stagnating economic and EPS
growth is proving incorrect. The market response to
the FOMC statement suggests investors believe the Fed has
credibility in terms of its intended policy
actions.
What happens if we assign similar credibility
to the Fed’s economic projections and use them in our earnings and
valuation models? S&P 500 EPS would equal $112 (2013),
$120 (2014), and $128 (2015). Our macroeconomic regression
model based on output gap and inflation points to an expanding
P/E multiple of 12.9x, 14.0x, and 15.1x,
respectively.
But downside risk exists from the ‘fiscal
cliff’."
In light of this quote, I pose a fresh riddle for
all of you this afternoon.
If the Fed’s economic model is throwing up proper
fair value metrics; and the S&P 500 trades 6-12-18 months
ahead; then current S&P 500 fair value bases on 2013 numbers
above. This is $112*12.9=1445. With the S&P 500 trading
1450, we are on fair value right now.
By next spring, the S&P 500 trades on 2014
numbers. This is $120*14.0=1680.
That’s right. Fair value under the Fed’s
economic projections by spring 2013 is 1680 for
the S&P 500. After January’s ‘fiscal cliff’, we have
multiple winter and spring worries to debate
about.
What are your thoughts? Is S&P 500 at
1680 by spring where we are going? If not, what might stand
in our way…after the fiscal cliff?
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