Valuations – MSCI China Forward PE Ratio and MSCI EM
Valuations – MSCI China Forward PE Ratio and MSCI EM The valuation of the China equity market looks attractive again. Image: Topdown Charts
Valuations – MSCI China Forward PE Ratio and MSCI EM The valuation of the China equity market looks attractive again. Image: Topdown Charts
Valuation – Nasdaq Composite Index Next 12 Months Price/Earnings Ratio After the January sell-off, the valuation of the Nasdaq is becoming more attractive. Image: Morgan Stanley Wealth Management
Dedicated Emerging Market Funds – Market Share EM ETF market share is at a record low, while long-term valuations are attractive. Image: Topdown Charts
Small Cap Stocks – Next 12 Months Price/Earnings Ratio, Russell 2000 Relative to S&P 500 U.S. small caps look attractive relative to the broad market. Image: Morgan Stanley Research
Yield Gap – S&P 500 EPS Yield vs. U.S. 10-Year Treasury Yield Relative U.S. equity valuations are still attractive vs. history. Image: Goldman Sachs Global Investment Research
Inflation – Real Estate Real Dividend Yield vs. TIPS Real Yield Real estate real dividend yields remain attractive relative to TIPS real yields. Image: BofA US Equity & Quant Strategy
Gold Miners vs. S&P 500 and Market Breadth Valuations of gold miners relative to the S&P 500 look attractive. Should investors expect a short-term upside in gold miners? Image: Topdown Charts
Emerging Market Equities vs. S&P 500 Emerging market equities look attractive relative to the S&P 500. Image: BofA Global Research
Valuation – World Technology 12-Month Forward Earnings Yield Minus 2.5% and U.S. 10-Year Treasury Bond Yield Tech stocks are less attractive, as the world tech 12-month forward earnings yield minus 2.5% has reached the upper limit to bond yield. Image: BCA Research
EM vs. DM Valuation Emerging market equities look attractive relative to developed market equities. Image: Goldman Sachs Global Investment Research
S&P 500 Equity Risk Premium and Yield Gap U.S. equities remain attractively valued relative to bonds. Image: Goldman Sachs Global Investment Research