As the Powell Fed has signaled it is dead set on a hawkish policy that does not preclude inducing a recession, valuation will matter soon. The 10-year Treasury yield stands at 2.8% and the S&P 500 forward P/E is 19.0. The last time the 10-year reached these levels was 2028 when the forward P/E traded mostly in a range of 15-16 but bottomed at a panic low of 13.6. The previous episode of a similar 10-year yield was in H2 2013 when the forward P/E was in the range of 13.5-15.
![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjAlA6ve9OjW8Y8kw39c2V82OEGixM3vhisnYlQrWvwNEV_jDYbsuFR6VvK4fQbqE1TAJqLhsokGz4IZnTuEDHJiuzP797QLGWVDMhIrqzlN-uI0oNwQygjKx9PBhqv_Ep9bNlXNIXhgnvC0FNhsNJQQswASJyD86dvkXw7QbSt_WgppH5qVOKq22pTpw/w400-h395/Factset%20fwd%20PE%20and%20TNX.png)
All else being equal, this implies downside risk of -15% to -30% for the S&P 500. That's why US equity investors are playing with fire.
The full post can be found here.