S&P 400 CAPE ratio
The current Shiller CAPE Ratio for S&P 400 Index is 25.315 (2026-01-09), with an average CAPE of 27.335. The lowest CAPE Ratio was 17.419 on 2020-03-23, and the highest was 36.123 on 2021-04-27.
The CAPE ratio for the S&P 400 evaluates mid-cap U.S. stocks by comparing current prices to inflation-adjusted earnings averaged over the past 10 years. This helps smooth out short-term earnings fluctuations, offering a long-term perspective on valuation. Applied to the S&P 400, which tracks medium-sized companies typically valued between $2 billion and $10 billion, the CAPE ratio helps investors determine if these stocks are overvalued or undervalued compared to historical norms. A high ratio suggests overvaluation and potential lower future returns, while a low ratio indicates undervaluation and possibly higher returns, guiding long-term investment decisions.
CAPE Statistics for S&P 400 (2018-07-02 to 2026-01-09)
- Current CAPE: 25.315 (0.84%)
- Min: 17.419 (2020-03-23)
- Max: 36.123 (2021-04-27)
- Mean: 27.335
- Median: 25.933
CAPE vs Forward Returns — S&P 400
S&P 400 Metrics (2016-01-11 → 2026-01-09)
- Current Value: 3459.81 (0.85%)
- YTD Return: 3.3%
- Annualized Volatility YTD: 16.44%
- Average Annual Return: 10.14%
- CAGR: 10.25%
10-Year Performance for S&P 400 Index
Cumulative Return
Annual Returns
Quarterly Returns
Rolling Volatility (6M)
Return Distribution & Tail Risk (VaR 95/99)
VaR 95%: %
VaR 99%: %