Keeping correction in perspective

Published 9:55 pm Thursday, April 19, 2018

By Mark McGahee

Are you upset by what is happening on Wall Street? It may help to see this pullback within a big-picture context. Corrections have become so rare as of late that when one occurs, emotion threatens to influence investment decisions.

So far, it has been a rough year for equities. At the close on Feb. 8, the Dow Jones Industrial Average was officially in correction territory after a slide occurred, which included two 1,000-point descents within four days. Additionally, nearly every U.S. equity index had lost 7 percent or more in the past five trading sessions.

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This drop was troubling, yes — but not as unsettling as it may first seem. The market has been up for so long that it is easy to dismiss the reality of its occasional downs. Last year’s quiet trading climate could legitimately be characterized as “abnormal.”

Prior to this retreat, the S&P 500 had not fallen 5 percent from a peak since June 2016. It went more than 400 trading days without such a slump, setting a record. In this same calm stretch, the index also went through its longest period without a dip of 3 percent or more.

During a typical year, there are five trading days when equities descend at least 2 percent, plus one correction of about 14%. On average, equities take roughly a 30 percent fall every five years.

This year, the kind of volatility normally seen in the market has returned. It may feel like a shock after so much smooth sailing, but it is the norm — and while the Dow’s recent daily losses are numerically unprecedented, they are also proportionate with the level of the index.

A few things are worth remembering at this juncture:

  • Wall Street has had more good years than bad ones, as any casual glance at its history will reveal. This year may turn out well.
  • Something similar happened in the mid-1990s — a long, easygoing bull run was suddenly disrupted by major volatility. That bull market kept going, though — it lasted four more years, and the S&P 500 doubled along the way.
  • This market needed to cool off; in the minds of many analysts, valuations had become too expensive.
  • The economy is in excellent shape.
  • Earnings are living up to expectations. Last week, Thomson Reuters noted that 78 percent of the S&P firms that had reported this earnings season had topped profit forecasts.

Wall Street may be turbulent, but you can stay calm. Talk with a financial professional if you have concerns or anxieties about this volatile episode for the markets.

Mark McGahee can be reached at 539-9465 or mmcgahee@isgva.com.