Why You Should Watch the Shiller CAPE Index The Shiller CAPE Index is a long‑term valuation metric for stocks that compares today’s prices to 10 years of inflation‑adjusted earnings, and you should care because extreme readings have historically lined up with meaningfully different long‑run returns. What the Shiller CAPE Index is CAPE stands for Cyclically Adjusted Price‑to‑Earnings ratio, also called the Shiller P/E or P/E 10. It is calculated as: current index level divided by the average of the last 10 years of earnings per share, with those earnings adjusted for inflation. Robert Shiller popularized it to smooth out the business cycle noise that distorts the usual one‑year P/E. What it is trying to tell you By averaging a decade of real earnings, CAPE aims to say, “How expensive is this market relative to a normal level of earnings through a full cycle?” Higher‑than‑average CAPE has historically bee...
How should I react to commercials about real estate investing? Treat real estate investment commercials as sales pitches first and, at best, raw leads for further due‑diligence—not as something to act on directly. Any serious step should only follow independent verification of the people, the deal, and how it fits your overall plan. What these commercials are really doing They are designed to create leads for sponsors, syndicators or timeshare-like products, using TV, online, and seminar advertising specifically because it scales and converts skeptical viewers into warm prospects. The business model of many seminar and ad campaigns is to sell education, memberships or high-fee products, not to help you build wealth efficiently. Red flags to watch for Promises of “guaranteed” or unusually high returns with little or no risk or suggestions you can get rich quickly or passively with minimal effort. Vague descriptions of th...