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Far From Unprecedented: Nine Routs Like This, and Nine Rebounds

The selloff that’s been battering investors for nine days feels like the worst thing ever -- it’s far from that.

Far From Unprecedented: Nine Routs Like This, and Nine Rebounds
A trader works on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) in New York, U.S. (Photographer: Michael Nagle/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- The selloff that’s been battering investors for nine days feels like the worst thing ever -- it’s far from that.

Nine times since the bull market began in 2009 have equities experienced stretches as gruesome as this one; each time the end of the world was averted.

Here’s a quick walk down bad memory lane.

January 2016

Concern about an economic slowdown and mounting debt in China’s economy sent the S&P 500 Index down 11 percent over the course of three weeks. There were 13 days when the market lost at least 1 percent, with bear market anxieties igniting Feb. 11 when stocks hit a 22-month low. Then it was over, with the S&P 500 advancing 11 percent over the next month. By mid-April, all of the January losses were gone. 

Far From Unprecedented: Nine Routs Like This, and Nine Rebounds

August 2015

Blame the world’s second-largest economy for this one, as well. Angst over China’s shock devaluation of the yuan and a rout in Asian equities triggered a 1,000-point slump in the Dow Jones Industrial Average on Aug. 24. Greece’s debt crisis soured sentiment further, albeit not for a long while. The S&P lost 11 percent over the course of six sessions only to wipe out the losses in the next two months.

Far From Unprecedented: Nine Routs Like This, and Nine Rebounds

October 2014

The spread of the Ebola virus, concern about the end of Quantitative Easing and tensions in the Middle East triggered a 460-point rout in the Dow average on Oct. 15, widening a selloff that started a week earlier to 5 percent. The rout faded as quickly, and the Dow recouped all the losses in the next two weeks even as a doctor in New York tested positive for the virus.

Far From Unprecedented: Nine Routs Like This, and Nine Rebounds

January 2014

A rout in emerging markets stocks and currencies triggered a 3.6 percent slide in January, the worst monthly performance since 2012. The selloff wasn’t abrupt; on just three days did stocks fall more than 1 percent over the course of the month. A 4.3 percent advance in the S&P 500 in February was the start of a five-month streak of gains.

Far From Unprecedented: Nine Routs Like This, and Nine Rebounds

October - November 2012

Uncertainty leading up to the 2012 election between Barack Obama and Mitt Romney and a weak jobless claims report were behind the S&P 500’s 7.1 percent decline between Oct. 18 and Nov. 15. The retreat included 5 drops of more than 1 percent. Eleven weeks later it was over and the benchmark climbed back above its level.

Far From Unprecedented: Nine Routs Like This, and Nine Rebounds

March - June 2012

Federal Reserve minutes showing the central bank would hold off more easing unless U.S. economic expansion faltered were behind a nearly 10 percent decline from April to June of 2012. The S&P fell 9.9 percent between April 2 and June 4, including nine drops of more than 1 percent. About five months later it was over and the benchmark recouped its losses.

Far From Unprecedented: Nine Routs Like This, and Nine Rebounds

July-August 2011

The U.S. government was stripped of its pristine credit rating after Congress played chicken with the debt ceiling. A lackluster jobs report didn’t help. The S&P 500 fell 17 percent between July 7 and Aug. 8, including five drops of more than 1 percent and two of more than 4 percent. About seven months later it was over and the benchmark climbed back above its level.

Far From Unprecedented: Nine Routs Like This, and Nine Rebounds

2010

There were two additional drawdowns in 2010, an 8 percent pullback that began in January and was over by the end of the next month, and a 16 percent slide that started in April and didn’t end until July. The infamous flash crash, on May 6, 2010, occurred in that period.

To contact the reporters on this story: Elena Popina in New York at epopina@bloomberg.net, Sarah Ponczek in New York at sponczek2@bloomberg.net.

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Jeremy Herron at jherron8@bloomberg.net, Chris Nagi

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