Goldman Sachs’ Bear Market Indicator Flashing A Warning Sign (SPY)

From Tyler Durden: On Thursday, just as the S&P hit its latest all time high, the broad US equity index surpassed the 266% increase recorded during the 1949 to 1956 bull market from its March 2009 “generational lows”, in the process becoming the 3rd strongest bull market – artificial and central bank-driven as it may be – in history.

It also prompted Citi to calculate the odds of an imminent market correction (one starting in the next 3 months) at 45%.

At the very same time that Citi was calculating the probability of the next crash, Goldman was doing the exact same analysis, and while we thought Citi’s take of the immediate future was gloomy, Goldman’s is downright apocalyptic because as the bank’s global equities strategist Peter Oppenheimer writes in his recent “Bear Necessities” report, Goldman’s Bear Market Risk Indicator has recently shot up to 67%, prompting Goldman to ask, rhetorically, should we be worried now?

The simple answer, as shown in the chart below, is a resounding yes because the last two times Goldman’s bear market risk indicator was here, was just before the dot com bubble and just before the global financial crisis of 2008.

What happened next is vividly familiar to most except the current generation of 2-some year old hedge fund managers who have yet to see a 20% (or even 10%) correction.

Back to Goldman, this is how the world’s biggest incubator of central bankers explains the above startling observation:

To be sure, the last thing Goldman wants to do is cause a wholesale selling panic (we assume), and predictably Oppenheimer immediately rushes to mitigate the dire implication of the above chart, writing that “if we exclude valuation from the index, the level falls into the low 60% category. On historical relationships this would imply a 50/50 probability of a bear market in the next 12 months. The chances of a bear market are still high (based on the historical relationships) over the next 2 years, but remember that at any point in time the chances over 2 years can go up.”

Not satisified with that footnote, and perhaps concerned about the flood of phone calls on Monday by worried clients demanding an explanation for this startkly realistic take, Oppenheimer doubles down and explains that while Goldman’s Bear Market Risk Indicator is currently at 67% and this would suggest that the risk of a bear market is high, “there are three reasons to worry less than in the past.

  • First, inflation has played an important part in rising bear market risks in past cycles. Structural factors may be keeping inflation lower than in the past, and central bank forward guidance is reducing interest rate volatility and the term premium. Without monetary policy tightening much, concerns about a looming recession – and therefore risks of a ‘cyclical’ bear market – are lower.

  • Second, financial imbalances and leverage in the banking system have been reduced post the financial crisis. This makes a structural bear market less likely than in the past.

  • Third, valuation is currently the most stretched of the factors in the Indicator. This is largely a function of very loose monetary policy and bond yields. Excluding valuation (the grey line in Exhibit 1) reduces the level of the Indicator to a more comfortable level.