The February "flash correction" was 11.8%. This one is barely 11.5%.
What do corrections typically look like from new ATH -- with the economy bustling, wages rising, and a Fed that doesn't want to get behind the inflation curve?
The reason that these corrections go to 15%+ (S&P 2500 min) is because fund and portfolio managers have to re-allocate for the strong possibility of a new chapter in the late-cycle environment, even if their 12-month recession probability has only gone up to 20%. The "forward multiple is only 16X" camp hasn't had to deal with 2019 estimates coming down from $170+ yet.
So, forced selling dominates until a new "fair value" equilibrium is reached. Maybe that's S&P 2400 /$160 = 15X.
لا يُقصد بالمعلومات والمنشورات أن تكون، أو تشكل، أي نصيحة مالية أو استثمارية أو تجارية أو أنواع أخرى من النصائح أو التوصيات المقدمة أو المعتمدة من TradingView. اقرأ المزيد في شروط الاستخدام.