Gordon Gekko
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Far worse to be the guy hurling the accusation of Lucy-ism when in fact you don’t get the point being made.
Well, I'm happy to admit that I don't understand your point. Could you have another go at explaining it for us?Far worse to be the guy hurling the accusation of Lucy-ism when in fact you don’t get the point being made.
I don't think Lucy ever admitted to his clanger.Far worse to be the guy hurling the accusation of Lucy-ism when in fact you don’t get the point being made.
I don't think Lucy ever admitted to his clanger.
"(CAPE) is a valuation metric which looks at the position relative to long-term averages; i.e. it’s based on the idea of mean reversion." Let me parse and analyse this statement. The key link is the "i.e." which is Latin for "that is". I can see no other interpretation for this whatsoever than it is saying "CAPE is based on the idea of mean reversion because it looks at the position relative to long-term averages."
You seem to be saying that this is not at all what you meant. So can I suggest that to resolve this semantic debate that you will accept that the statement in bold is entirely incorrect (but is not a reflection of what you meant)?
Sorry Gordon but I have absolutely no idea what that is supposed to mean.The kernel of my position is that CAPE are irrelevant unless the proponent embraces the idea that markets are inherently predictable over the long-term.
So this is what you think has some validity:I will not accept that it is “entirely incorrect”.
What point is that? That there are mean reversion theories? No one is denying their existence, but really quite irrelevant to the semantic debate.
Valuation relative to valuations in the past; valuation relative to other stocks; valuation relative to prevailing interest rates, etc.Valuation relative to what?!
Valuation relative to valuations in the past; valuation relative to other stocks; valuation relative to prevailing interest rates, etc.
Absolutely nothing to do with mean reversion.
There is simply no validity to the statement that CAPE (or any other valuation metric for that matter) is based on mean reversion. None whatsoever. It just isn't true.
Why you can't simply acknowledge that and move on is beyond me.
Of course.In order to opine whether valuations are high or low, one must compare them to something.
Of course.
But that has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with any theory of mean reversion.
I can say that the valuation of a particular stock is high or low relative to its average historic valuation over the last 10 years. That doesn't imply or suggest that I necessarily believe or assume that the stock price is ever going to fall back in line with its historic valuation.
I actually suspect you know that is the case but you can't bring yourself to admit that you made a mistake. It would be nice to move on...
I am glad that you are conceding the last word on this. You singled out CAPE as relying on mean reversion because it uses long term averages. The term "long term averages" rang a mean reversion bell with you but as I have explained ad nauseam, the use of long term averages in the CAPE has nothing whatsoever to do with mean reversion.”. That is the last that you will hear from me on this as I too am getting sick of the back and forth.
No Gordon.
I can say that stock valuations are high relative to their long-term average without accepting that they will inevitably revert to that long-term average.
There can be all sorts of reasons why stock valuations may be high relative to their long-term average. Historically low interest rates, for example.
I don't have to accept any theory of mean reversion to assert that a stock's valuation is high (or low) relative to something else.
Apparently my suspicion that you already understood this was incorrect. My apologies.
Let's move on.
Surely, you would invite PurpleAll we need is the Big Short to join this discussion and then we have a party....
Duke, a bit harsh comparing it to the deposit selling moment!! Ah, they were the good old days.....
Your obstinacy certainly was in danger of driving me to drink... but I’ll put it down to there possibly being drink involved on your side ...
Mean reversion is a financial theory suggesting that asset prices and returns eventually return back to the long-run mean or average of the entire dataset.Nice add of “relative to their long-term averages”.