Market View

It Could Just be a Market Corrections?

According to Mark Hulbert, one of the hallmarks of a major market top is that the bear market than ensues is relatively mild at the beginning, only building up a head of steam over several months. Corrections, in contrast, tend to be far sharper and more precipitous.

Consider the losses incurred by the Dow Jones Industrial Average over the first three months of all bear markets of the last 80 years. Using he bear-market calendar maintained by Ned Davis Research, its average loss over these three-month periods was “just” 9.0%.

The stock market’s decline since the all-time highs, in contrast, has been nearly twice as large: The Dow has skidded 18.7% from its Oct. 3 record close, for example, and the S&P 500, 19.8% from its Sept. 20 record close. The Nasdaq has plunged even more: 23.6% from its closing peak in Aug. 29.

Exception? There were two past major declines of the last 80 years on the Ned Davis calendar that did begin with three-month declines as big as what we’ve experienced recently:
1     the 1987 crash
2     the decline from July through October of 1990.

But even these exceptions end up proving the rule: Each lasted just three months or so.

Reference

MarketWatch, Mark Hulbert, 2018-12-25, “This Still Looks Like Just a Stock-Market Correction, Not Something Worse.”

Related Articles

Back to top button