Despite Choppy Start to 2025, Bulls Could Reclaim Record Highs by Spring

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We are biased by the stock market’s bullish bias. We tend to be permabulls because bear markets are infrequent and are usually relatively short compared to bull markets, which tend to last for some time. Since January 1978, the S&P 500 is up 66.6-fold.S&P 500 Stock Price Index

In that entire 47-year period, there were just six bear markets that lasted only a bit more than one year on average. Bear markets tend to be caused by recessions. There have been only six of them since 1978, lasting just 14 months on average.S&P 500 Price and Recessions

As we’ve previously noted, we regularly follow the growlings of the permabears as an efficient way to assess what could go wrong for the economy and the stock market. Very rarely do we find that they’ve missed all the things that could go wrong, while we frequently find that they’ve mostly ignored an assessment of what could go right. (See our December 23, 2024 QuickTakes titled “Permabulls Versus Permabears.

The S&P 500 peaked at a record high of 6090.27 on December 6. It ended in 2024 at 5881.63. The index ended the first week of the new year at 5942.47, just below its 50-day moving average.S&P 500 and Moving Averages

The Nasdaq peaked last year at a record 20,173.89 on December 16 and bounced off its 50-day moving average last week to close at 19,621.7.Nasdaq Composite Daily Chart

On balance, we expect that the next few weeks could be choppy for the stock market before the S&P 500 and Nasdaq resume climbing to new record highs during the spring.

This article was originally published on this site