Abby Joseph Cohen Says Fair-Value S&P Has ‘No Margin for Error’
(Bloomberg) — Investors should assess their appetite for stocks carefully given higher inflation and an S&P 500 Index that’s nearing fair trade value, said Abby Joseph Cohen, senior investment strategist at Goldman Sachs Group Inc.
“When you’re at fair value, there is no margin for error,” Cohen said in a Bloomberg TV interview Wednesday. “If there are disappointments, be it on interest rates or OPEC, that’s where you start to see a big increase in volatility within the market itself.”
Citing her colleagues who see 4,300 as fair value, Cohen said, “We’re sort of at a knife’s edge,” with the S&P 500 trading near 4,350 on Wednesday. Against the unusual backdrop of low nominal yields and negative real yields, investors should consider their next moves “carefully, very carefully,” said the strategist, whose market assessments are closely followed on Wall Street.
The Cboe Volatility Index, best known as a gauge of fear in equity markets, suggests that concerns are steadily rising among investors as trading volume has slowed. The benchmark known as the VIX rebounded this week after declining to its lowest level since February 2020.
When asked what types of stocks could be sustainable in the current market environment, Cohen said that investors should look past broad sector issues to focus on “idiosyncratic opportunities,” such as industrial firms embracing renewable energy “that have repositioned themselves well for the 21st Century needs.”
More stories like this are available on bloomberg.com
Subscribe now to stay ahead with the most trusted business news source.
©2021 Bloomberg L.P.