Veteran analyst has blunt warning about 2025 stock market predictions

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The word pundit, meaning an expert in a particular subject or field, comes from the Sanskrit term for "learned man."

When it comes to the stock market, however, there is some debate as to just how learned these purported prognosticators actually are.

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This is that magical time of year when those in the know come bloviating their way into our hearts and telling us how things are going to be.

It may seem to some folks that cable TV runs on pundit power as a veritable mighty wind of verbiage lays out the future in all its glory.

Related: Major analyst revamps S&P 500 target for 2025

These experts do get a lot of attention, but certain parties remain skeptical.

Berkshire Hathaway’s  (BRK.A)  Warren Buffet, for example, has made no secret of his disdain for market soothsayers, declaring in his 1992 letter to Berkshire Hathaway shareholders, “We’ve long felt that the only value of stock forecasters is to make fortune tellers look good.”

Pundits had a lot to say about the S&P 500 this year.
Pundits had a lot to say about the S&P 500 this year.

Bad year for pundits

The Oracle of Omaha said he believed that short-term market forecasts "are poison and should be kept locked up in a safe place, away from children and also from grown-ups who behave in the market like children."

Let's move along a little bit to late December 2023, when the Economist said that shareholders had experienced "a remarkably good year," while forecasters had a terrible one.

Related: US stocks rule as bull market bets highlight 'American exceptionalism'

And Bloomberg stated last year that "stocks rallied when they were forecast to tumble, expected bond gains fizzled, and the recession never came...up and down Wall Street, forecasters were caught flat-footed by how the first half of 2023 unfolded in financial markets."

So, how did the cognoscenti do in 2024?

Last month, Avantis Investors issued its market forecasters’ report card, where the company aggregated year-end 2024 price targets for the S&P 500 from 20 firms, all issued in late 2023.

The study found that none of the 20 estimated year-end price targets were even close to where the S&P 500 currently stands.

“Given that none of the 20 firms in the 2024 sample were in the ballpark of the actual results we’ve observed, it’s no surprise that the median estimate is also well off the mark,” the report said.

Over the seven years in the study, the implied return from the consensus estimates was never within 10% of the actual S&P 500 return, Avantis said, ranging instead from an underestimate of 26% to an overestimate of 21%.