The Stock Market Just Crossed a Threshold It’s Never Reached Before — and History Is Quite Clear What Happens Next

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Since reaching a bear market bottom a little over two years ago, the bulls have been running the show on Wall Street. This year, the ageless Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJINDICES: ^DJI), benchmark S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC), and growth stock-dependent Nasdaq Composite (NASDAQINDEX: ^IXIC) have reached multiple all-time highs.

The wind in Wall Street’s sails has been a “team” effort, with the artificial intelligence (AI) revolution, stock-split euphoria, better-than-anticipated corporate operating results, a resurgence in share repurchase activity, and optimism following President-elect Donald Trump’s victory all leading the charge.

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While this collection of catalysts might appear unstoppable on the surface, history offers a different lesson.

Image source: Getty Images.

Since the height of the 2022 bear market, there have been a couple of predictive tools and correlative events that have foreshadowed trouble for the U.S. economy and/or Wall Street. The longest yield-curve inversion in history, a historically high S&P 500 Shiller price-to-earnings ratio, and the first meaningful drop in U.S. M2 money supply since the Great Depression have all previously served as warnings for Wall Street.

But perhaps nothing screams “pay attention” to investors quite like the long-term valuation metric Berkshire Hathaway‘s billionaire CEO Warren Buffett once touted.

In a 2001 interview with Fortune magazine, Buffett lauded the market cap-to-gross domestic product (GDP) ratio as “probably the best single measure of where valuations stand at any given moment.” Even though the aptly named Oracle of Omaha has backed away from solely relying on this valuation tool, it’s commonly referred to as the “Buffett Indicator” on Wall Street.

The Buffett Indicator takes the collective market value of a country’s publicly traded stocks and divides that figure into its GDP. The lower the ratio, the cheaper stocks are perceived to be. Conversely, when the ratio is high, it suggests stocks are historically pricey compared to the underlying growth rate of the economy.

The most-effective way to measure the value of publicly traded stocks in the U.S. is with the Wilshire 5000 Index. Each “point” higher or lower in the Wilshire 5000 Index represents a little over $1 billion gained or lost in the aggregate market value of U.S. stocks.

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