Warren Buffett wrote an article in Fortune a while back where he showed some numbers that stated there was a bubble. He wrote it in 1999, and then another followup in 2001.
Basically, he had a chart going back 80 years that showed the total value of the stock market as a percentage of the GNP. For the greater part of the time period, the stock market hovered around 70-90% of the GNP. With a few exceptions: 1998, and 1929. In 1998, it reached 200%, in 1929, it was something less than that (160%?).
His point being at the time that he didn’t find equities appealing. In the 2001 article, he showed it still being around 130%.
He hasn’t updated us lately, so I thought I’d do a few updated calcs.
I couldn’t find the total market value anywhere, so I used the S&P 500 index as a stand-in, and I found some historical GDP instead of GNP, but they’re usually pretty close.
So:
beginning of 2001:
GDP: 9953
S&P: 1320
beginning of 2004:
GDP: 11252
S&P: 1111
for 2001, if I played with and normalized the numbers (basically moving the decimal point on the GDP) I calibrate to Warren’s numbers:
1320/995.3 = 133%
So, going forward to 2004:
1125/1111 = 101%
Warren says that 80-90% gives good odds for stock investment in general.
So, we’re not out of the woods, but getting there.
Love your site man keep up the good work
Love your site man keep up the good work
Love your site man keep up the good work