The S&P 500's forward price-to-earnings ratio sits near 21x, according to FactSet — a level above its five-year average but short of historic extremes.

The forward P/E ratio measures the index's current price against analysts' estimates of earnings over the coming twelve months. A reading near 21x indicates that investors are paying a premium relative to the index's recent five-year norm, a benchmark frequently cited as a quick gauge of whether equities look stretched.

Per FactSet, the current 21x figure is above that five-year average. The same data, however, places the multiple below levels associated with prior valuation peaks — a distinction that frames the present market as elevated rather than at an outright extreme.

The precise five-year average multiple, the long-run historical average, and the specific levels FactSet considers "extreme" were not provided in the source material. . . .

Valuation multiples shift as both prices and forward earnings estimates change, so a forward P/E is a snapshot rather than a fixed measure. The figure above reflects the reading attributed to FactSet at the time of this report.

What it means for investors

A forward P/E above its five-year average tells investors that the index is priced richly versus its own recent history, while the absence of an extreme reading suggests valuations are not flashing the kind of warning seen at prior peaks. Whether that balance is reassuring or cautionary depends on each investor's own assumptions about future earnings growth, interest rates, and risk tolerance — none of which are addressed by the multiple alone. This is context, not a signal to act, and a single valuation metric should be weighed alongside broader fundamentals.

Source: FactSet via ZeroHedge