Fortune | FORTUNE 09月24日
美股总市值占GDP比重创历史新高,警惕潜在泡沫
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美国股市总市值占GDP比重已飙升至GDP的363%,远超互联网泡沫时期。尽管华尔街策略师指出,自上世纪80年代以来,牛市已持续数十年,但当前市场主要由人工智能热潮、科技巨头股票以及高昂的市盈率驱动,引发了对历史性泡沫的担忧。实际盈利增长缓慢,股价上涨主要归因于估值飙升。专家建议通过多元化投资来应对潜在的市场波动。

📈 **股市总市值创纪录新高:** 当前美国股市总市值已达GDP的363%,远超互联网泡沫时期的212%,显示出市场估值处于历史高位。

🤖 **AI热潮与估值飙升:** 人工智能的狂热以及少数科技巨头的股票,加上高昂的市盈率,是推动当前牛市的主要因素。然而,有分析指出,即便与互联网泡沫时期相比,一些AI驱动的股票也可能被更高估。

📉 **经济增长与盈利滞后:** 尽管股市屡创新高,但经济增长却显现出疲态,就业增长放缓,GDP增长率低于预期。企业盈利增长也未能跟上通胀步伐,意味着股价的上涨主要来自估值而非实际盈利能力的提升。

💡 **“金融化”趋势与风险:** 自上世纪80年代以来,美国经济呈现出“金融化”的趋势,金融表现与实体经济基本面脱节。这种现象引发了对市场可持续性的担忧,并可能导致投资者面临高昂的交易成本。

🛡️ **多元化投资建议:** 面对当前高企的市场估值和潜在风险,专家建议投资者应考虑分散投资,增加对美国大型科技股以外的国际股票、核心固定收益产品和另类投资的配置,以降低风险并应对市场波动。

A leading Wall Street strategist is doing some calculations about the total value of U.S. stocks rocketing to a staggering 363% of GDP as of last Friday, blowing past the infamous 212% mark reached during the dotcom bubble. It’s a warning if you think it’s unsustainable, but David Kelly, chief global strategist for JP Morgan Asset Management, notes that the bull market is truly epic, “stretching, with some interruptions, all the way back to the 1980s.”

The market’s seemingly unstoppable rise—driven largely by feverish enthusiasm for artificial intelligence, a few mega-cap tech stocks, and lofty price-to-earnings (P/E) multiples—has set off a heated debate about whether investors are now perched on the edge of another historic bubble.

The S&P 500’s relentless march has led to some of the most expensive stock prices on record. As recently as August, Fortune‘s Shawn Tully reported, the index reached a record close at 6,501, sending its trailing P/E ratio (using actual GAAP earnings, not wall-street projections) to 30x. Tully noted that this territory has been seen only during rare moments in market history, including the tech frenzy from 1999 to 2002, and briefly in recent crises when earnings collapsed. For context, investors were getting $5 of earnings for every $100 invested as recently as 2022; today, they’re getting just $3. What’s striking is that earnings themselves have barely kept up with inflation, meaning that the epic climb in stock prices has come almost entirely from surging multiples, rather than corporate profit growth.

Kelly offered his own calculation in a Monday analyst note, “Checking the Foundations of a Roaring Bull Market.” Until the start of this epic, multi-decade rally, the value of all U.S. equities had averaged 72% of GDP between the third quarter of 1955 and the third quarter of 1985. What has transpired since has been remarkable, Kelly writes, and “the biggest part of market gains have not come from economic growth but rather from a rising profit share of GDP and higher P/E multiples.” Kelly adds that the “scaffolding supporting this roaring bull market” is “increasingly lofty”—and possibly unsustainable.

Kelly’s thesis fits with warnings from several commentators about a “financialization” of the U.S. economy since the age of Ronald Reagan in the 1980s. Financial Times columnist Rana Foroohar, then of Time, wrote a book on the subject called “Makers and Takers,” and touched on the evidence everywhere in the zeitgeist that financial performance had become detached from fundamentals. “The Big Short,” Adam McKay’s adaptation of the Michael Lewis non-fiction classic, was a key piece of evidence. These dynamics were memorably captured on cinema during the actual 1980s, in Oliver Stone’s classic “Wall Street,” which included the memorable line: “Greed is Good.”

AI hype: bubble or breakthrough?

Much of this valuation mania is focused on AI and tech. The recent launch of GPT-5, greeted as a potential revolution, failed to live up to the wildest expectations, fueling tech-sector jitters and a $1 trillion sell-off in the S&P 500 during the summer. Veteran AI critic Gary Marcus points to the dismal 95% failure rate of generative AI projects in industry and a market psychology reminiscent of previous manias—where “smart people get overexcited about a kernel of truth” and disconnect from reality. Apollo Global Management’s chief economist Torsten Slok and others have argued that today’s S&P 500 leaders, especially AI-driven giants, are even more overvalued relative to their fundamentals than their 1990s dotcom counterparts.

Data center investments have soared—so much so that their contribution to GDP growth in early 2025 has matched that of all consumer spending, raising concerns that companies are overcommitting to a trend that may not deliver near-term profits. AI unicorn valuations have ballooned to $2.7 trillion, but with limited industrywide revenue and profits, raising worries about whether the boom is sustainable.

Federal Reserve chair Jerome Powell recently told reporters that the central bank was seeing “unusually large amounts of economic activity” related to the buildout of AI infrastructure in the form of data centers. Of course, the multiples are most outsized in the tech sector, specifically the AI stocks driving the heavily concentrated S&P 500, such as the world’s most valuable company, Nvidia.

Weakening economic foundations

Worryingly, these record highs are being notched against a backdrop of tepid economic growth and signs of labor market trouble. July’s jobs report showed just 73,000 new hires, while the past three months saw only 106,000 net new jobs—a fraction of last year’s pace. GDP growth is languishing at an annualized rate of 1.75% for the first half of 2025, down sharply from late 2024 and well below the levels needed to tame the swelling federal debt. Such sluggish growth further undermines the case for current equity valuations, which have been driven almost exclusively by rising multiples, not improved corporate performance.

For ordinary investors, this means a very costly catch: stock prices are high because they’ve bid up the same dollar of corporate profit to levels seen only in the wildest days of the dotcom or pandemic run-ups. As the bull market floats higher and higher above underlying economic growth, seasoned strategists recommend preparing portfolios for turbulence by diversifying beyond U.S. mega-caps, increasing exposure to international stocks, core fixed income, and alternatives.

Kelly is sanguine about what may happen, reasoning that the bull market has run longer than anyone could ever expect, so prognosticating is difficult at this point, while advising diversification as a sound strategy. Still, the data is remarkable. Between 3Q55 and 3Q85, he finds, the S&P500 provided an 8.8% total return each year, on average, including dividends. “In the 40 years since, it has returned an astounding 11.6% per year.”

For this story, Fortune used generative AI to help with an initial draft. An editor verified the accuracy of the information before publishing. 

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美股 股市估值 人工智能 泡沫风险 经济增长 金融化 投资策略 US Stocks Market Valuation Artificial Intelligence Bubble Risk Economic Growth Financialization Investment Strategy
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