Market Valuation: Is the Market Still Overvalued?

Market valuation indicators are used by investors and analysts to gauge whether markets are overvalued, undervalued, or fairly valued relative to historical norms. Here is a summary of the four market valuation indicators we update monthly.

  • The Crestmont Research P/E ratio (more)
  • The cyclical P/E ratio using the trailing 10-year earnings as the divisor (more)
  • The Q ratio, which is the total price of the market divided by its replacement cost (more)
  • The relationship of the S&P composite price to a regression trendline (more)

Key Takeaways

  1. Market valuation indicators show the S&P 500 is overvalued by 116% to 207% based on June 2026 monthly data.
  2. The four valuation indicators' average sits at 155%, remaining over 3 standard deviations above its historical mean.
  3. Market valuation indicators frame long-term investment return expectations rather than predicting short-term market direction signals.

To facilitate comparisons, we've adjusted the two P/E ratios and Q ratio to their arithmetic means and the inflation-adjusted S&P composite to its exponential regression. Additionally, we've plotted the S&P regression data as an area chart type rather than a line to make the comparisons easier to read. This reinforces the difference between the line charts (which are simple ratios) and the regression series (which measures the distance from an exponential regression on a log chart). Thus, the percentages on the vertical axis show the over/undervaluation as a percentage above the mean value, which we use as a surrogate for fair value.

Current Market Status: Based on June's S&P 500 monthly data, the market is OVERVALUED somewhere in the range of 116% to 207%, depending on the indicator. This is one of the highest overvaluation ranges in history.

Market Valuation Methods (Crestmont P/E, P/E10, Q-Ratio, and Regression to Trend) adjusted to arithmetic mean

The Geometric Mean Alternative

The chart below differs from the one above in that the three of our market valuation indicators—Crestmont P/E, P/E10, and Q-Ratio—are adjusted to their geometric mean rather than their arithmetic mean (what most people think of as the "average"). The geometric mean increases our attention to outliers. While the first chart does a satisfactory job of illustrating these four approaches, we've included the geometric variant as an interesting alternative view.

Current Market Status: Based on June's S&P 500 monthly data, the range of overvaluation for our geometric alternative sits between 142% to 207%, once again marking one of the highest overvaluation range in our series' history.

Market Valuation Methods (Crestmont P/E, P/E10, Q-Ratio, and Regression to Trend) adjusted to geometric mean