There is a natural assumption investors make:
If earnings are growing, markets should follow.
It feels logical. Businesses improve, profits rise, and prices should reflect that progress.
But markets do not price outcomes alone.
They price expectations of outcomes.
And expectations can change faster than the underlying business.
What Is Actually Happening
The S&P 500 has declined in recent weeks even as forward earnings expectations continue to rise.
That combination appears inconsistent.
It is not.
The explanation is straightforward:
- Earnings are rising
- Prices are falling
- The valuation multiple is compressing
This is multiple contraction in its simplest form.
The business is not weakening. The price investors are willing to pay for that business is changing.
The First Principle Behind Returns
Market returns are driven by three components:
- Earnings growth
- Dividends
- Change in valuation
The third component — valuation — is often underestimated.
When multiples expand, returns are amplified.
When multiples contract, they can offset even strong earnings growth.
That is what defines this phase.
Why Multiple Contraction Happens
Multiple contraction is not random. It is typically driven by a shift in assumptions:
- Higher interest rates increase the discount rate applied to future cash flows
- Elevated starting valuations leave less room for error
- Greater uncertainty reduces confidence in future earnings
When any of these factors change, valuation adjusts.
Not gradually, but often quickly.
History Is Clear on This
There have been many periods where:
- Earnings increased
- Markets declined
These are not outliers. They are recurring features of market behavior.
They tend to occur when expectations were previously high and are later revised downward.
In those moments, multiple contraction becomes the dominant force.
What Makes the Current Environment Different
Three conditions are shaping today’s market:
1. Higher cost of capital
Interest rates remain structurally higher than the prior decade, directly impacting valuations.
2. Concentration of earnings
A small group of companies drives a large share of index-level earnings.
3. Elevated expectations
Growth is not only expected, but expected to persist with consistency.
When expectations are concentrated, the system becomes more sensitive.
Small changes in assumptions lead to larger changes in valuation.
What the Market Is Signaling
The market is not rejecting earnings growth.
It is reassessing:
- The durability of that growth
- The predictability of future cash flows
- The appropriate valuation multiple
This distinction matters.
Because a valuation-driven decline reflects a change in perception, not necessarily a change in fundamentals.
Facts, Inference, Opinion
Facts
- Earnings expectations remain stable to rising
- Market prices have declined
- The gap is explained by multiple contraction
Inference
- Investors are applying a higher discount rate
- Uncertainty around future outcomes has increased
Opinion
- These periods are less about identifying broken businesses
- And more about identifying prior over-optimism in pricing
What Would Change This
A different outcome would require a shift in key variables:
- Inflation declines faster than expected
- Earnings materially exceed expectations
- Productivity gains sustain margin expansion
Under these conditions, multiple contraction may reverse or stabilize.
Absent that, valuation adjustment remains the rational response.
The Real Risk
The risk is not simply that markets fall.
The risk is concentration:
- Concentration in expectations
- Concentration in earnings drivers
- Concentration in portfolio exposure
When both expectations and outcomes depend on a narrow set of drivers, the margin for error becomes smaller than it appears.
Disclaimer: Nothing here should be considered an investment advice. All investments carry risks, including possible loss of principal and fluctuation in value. Finomenon Investments LLC cannot guarantee future financial results.





