The S&P 500 (^GSPC 0.02%) fell 0.2% today, failing to extend its eight-day winning streak. The narrower, price-weighted Dow (^DJI -0.11%) was down 0.1%, while the VIX Index (^VIX 1.44%) closed above 13 for the first time since Jan. 17.

Dow 20,000: Breaking the numbers down
Thomas Lee, chief U.S. equity strategist at JPMOrgan Chase, told CNBC today:

We're at $100 of S&P earnings; the cycle peak in earnings is closer to $150. That really follows the historical pattern of S&P profit cycles. Mid-cycle S&P multiples are at 17 [times earnings]. We're at 13 or 12 and a half. If you put a 17 multiple on $150, the S&P really sort of peaks around 2,400 [or] 2,500.

Meanwhile, he said that is equivalent to the Dow reaching "18, 19, 20,000 -- that's four years away." The Dow at 20,000 would imply a 44% rise over the next four years. Is that reasonable?

Since Lee's argument relies on the profit cycle, let's look at cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings multiples, which are calculated on the basis of a trailing-10-year average of inflation-adjusted earnings per share. On that basis, the average Dow component -- weighted by market value, not price -- is valued at 17.8 times earnings. That compares favorably to the S&P 500 index, which is valued at 22.7 times cyclically adjusted earnings and shows that high-quality, large-cap names (of which Dow components are some of the best examples) remain cheap relative to the broad market.

However, neither set of stocks looks wildly cheap in absolute terms, so if they are to gain 44% and 70%, respectively, in four years (a 70% rise would put the S&P 500 at 2,550), that puts most of the burden on earnings growth. On that front, members of the Dow, which earn a greater percentage of their earnings overseas than the average company in the S&P 500, also look better positioned.

Is Dow 20,000 in the cards within four years? That looks like an aggressive -- but achievable -- forecast. The S&P 500 at 2,550, on the other hand, well, that's closer to fantasy than forecast.