The Wall Street expert who called the last stock meltdown explains how investors are falling into a potentially catastrophic trap

If you were to take a blind survey of investors, most would tell you that corporate earnings are a rare bright spot in a landscape increasingly riddled with macro headwinds.

Ed Clissold, the chief US equity strategist at Ned Davis Research, doesn’t necessarily disagree. But he does think investors are taking that information and drawing the wrong conclusion.

It’s a common misconception that historically strong profit growth translates directly to a bright future for a company’s stock, Clissold says. He argues instead that, at such lofty levels, there’s often nowhere for earnings to go but down — something that doesn’t bode well for a firm’s shares.

To the extent that traders misinterpret peaking profit growth as a bullish long-term catalyst, they’re setting themselves up for disaster, according to Clissold. And he’s someone well worth listening to, considering he successfully called the December stock meltdown at a time when most on Wall Street were still bullish.

“When earnings growth is very high, it’s already priced in, and it’s not sustainable,” Clissold told Business Insider by phone.

He continued: “In terms of earnings expectations, when the beat rate is high, the assumption is that it’s a good thing. But actually, over the past six years, the market has done better when the beat rate has been lower.”

Read more: Forget the yield curve. Morgan Stanley says investors should be focused on a superior recession signal — one that’s threatening to flash by year-end.

The fourth quarter of 2018 is a prime example of this. While S&P 500 profits grew by 14%, the benchmark index ended up tumbling 14%. That’s because while conditions looked supportive from an earnings perspective, the market was priced for perfection.

Then — when mega-cap tech stocks rerated lower and the Federal Reserve failed to give investors the dovish outlook they so craved — the market collapsed, almost ending the nearly decadelong bull market. It was very much a situation in which euphoria had peaked, and profit growth was both ineffective and misleading.

But Clissold warns of a separate trap investors should beware during recessionary periods. Put simply, when the economy is contracting, disappointing earnings reports are a symptom of that and shouldn’t be viewed as a bullish indicator. It’s a key caveat for any trader combing earnings results for hints of future stock performance.

“If you’re going into a recession, then the lower beat rate is a signal of that,” Clissold said. “If you’re not, it’s just a sign that markets are taking a breather, and beat rates should go back up again, and markets will start pricing that in.”

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