1 comments

  • zerosizedweasle a day ago

    The Shiller P/E compares the price of a broad market index, such as the S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC), to its average inflation-adjusted earnings per share over the past 10 years. Its purpose is to give investors a long-term sense of whether the index looks expensive (or cheap) by smoothing out short-term profit swings.

    The CAPE ratio was one of the metrics that helped Shiller identify the dot-com bubble just before it popped in March 2000. Now, in December 2025, the market is back in the same range, which has some investors feeling very, very uneasy.

    The CAPE ratio may be flashing a warning sign

    Since the early 1870s, the Shiller P/E has historically been in the double-digit range, yet only twice has it exceeded 40.

    The first was during the dot-com bubble, when the Shiller P/E reached as high as 44 before the market crumbled.

    The second is happening right now. After a strong 2025 performance, fueled by artificial intelligence and the Magnificent Seven, the S&P 500's Shiller P/E has been hovering around 39 to 40.