Here’s a very good article by Joshua Brown of the Reformed Broker, who sends you to another article by Michael Batnick, the Irrelevant Investor. Today, Michael writes It Was The Best of Days, It Was The Worst of Days, which I also recommend reading.
What’s taking people’s breath away about this year’s stock market sell-off is probably some combination of three things: A) we’re unaccustomed to it, we’ve been spoiled for years, and B) it’s global in nature (and some would say global in origin), and C) the speed of the selling is incredible, by any historical standard – it feels like a whoosh straight down.
But as disorienting as this all feels, the truth is that double-digit drawdowns from prior highs in the S&P 500 are not an anomaly – they are the norm, statistically speaking. In fact, this happens during 2 out of every 3 years.
My colleague Michael Batnick has run the numbers…
He’s also got a great pair of charts showing the decline in each year along with that year’s closing gain or loss. This is a very powerful thing to be aware of given the cacophony of fear-mongering you’re coming into contact with right now.
Head over and check it out:
the Irrelevant Investor
Leave A Comment