The numbers behind Scott Bessent’s contrarian stock take

Data: Gateway Financial Advisors; Table: Axios Visuals

Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent broke with orthodoxy Sunday when he said corrections in stocks were “healthy” and an antidote to “euphoric” market action.

The big picture: Over the long run, he’s not necessarily wrong.


What they’re saying: “I’ve been in the investment business for 35 years, and I can tell you that corrections are healthy. They’re normal. What’s not healthy is straight up, that you get these euphoric markets. That’s how you get a financial crisis,” Bessent told NBC’s “Meet the Press” Sunday.

Zoom in: Corrections, or a 10% decline in the market from its recent peak, are pretty common.

  • They’ve happened dozens of times in the S&P 500 in recent decades, most recently starting last Thursday.

Between the lines: Since World War II, such corrections have only deteriorated into bear markets (a 20% decline) about a quarter of the time, Carson Investment Research’s Ryan Detrick noted on X.

  • In other words, more often than not, the market bounces back.

By the numbers: In a correction, on average the market takes five months to fall from peak to bottom, and then four months to bounce back, per Clearnomics data shared by Covenant Wealth Advisors.

  • After that, markets tend to rise strongly.
  • On average, between 1997 and 2020, stocks were up 32% one year after a correction, per data from Gateway Financial Advisors.

The bottom line: Past performance is no guarantee of future results — but it may be a reason to worry a little less.

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