A Stock That Has Fallen Sharply Is Not The Same As A Cheap Stock

 | Jan 21, 2022 21:39

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

Interest rates have soared, and stock markets have been melting as a result. Rates are likely going to continue to rise, especially on the short end of the yield curve, and that is only going to pressure expensive stocks lower over time as valuations reset. 

This reset is leading to multiple contraction across sectors and individual stock names.

While it may seem like some stocks are relative bargains at current levels, some may very well still have a long way to fall before they return to pre-pandemic valuations, especially if the Fed is as serious about tightening monetary policy as it seems to be. 

Technology Sector/h2

For example, the S&P Information Technology Index has seen its PE ratio expand from 23.1 in February 2020 to its current 25.5. So, while the index is down about 10% from Dec. 27, 2021, it doesn't mean it's cheap. The index would still need to fall an additional 9.5% to see it get back to pre-pandemic valuations. The big question ultimately is if the pre-pandemic peak PE ratio is too high. 

Prior to the run higher from October 2019 to February 2020, the tech index never even trade with a PE higher than 20.