The S&P 500 Just Did Something for Only the Fourth Time in 96 Years — and Its Historic Significance Can’t Be Overlooked


Since October 2022, the bulls have been in charge on Wall Street. In 2024, the ageless Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJINDICES: ^DJI), benchmark S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC), and growth-propelled Nasdaq Composite (NASDAQINDEX: ^IXIC) all climbed to numerous record-closing highs and finished the year up by 13%, 23%, and 29%, respectively.

Investors can thank the artificial intelligence (AI) revolution, strong corporate earnings, and excitement surrounding stock splits as part of a laundry list of factors responsible for lighting a fire under equities.

Although stocks moving higher is nothing new on Wall Street, the magnitude by which the broad-based S&P 500 has been rising in recent years is in rarified territory — and its historic significance can’t be overlooked.

A professional trader using a stylus to interact with a rapidly rising stock chart displayed on a tablet screen.
Image source: Getty Images.

The aforementioned laundry list of catalysts helped to lift the S&P 500 to a gain of 24% in 2023 and 23% in 2024. These are out of the norm increases for a stock index that’s historically risen by closer to 8% per year since 1928.

But what really stands out is how rare back-to-back gains of 20% or greater have been for the S&P 500. Over the last 96 years, there are only four periods of consecutive annual gains topping 20%:

  • 1935 (41.37%) and 1936 (27.92%)

  • 1954 (45.02%) and 1955 (26.4%)

  • 1995 (34.11%), 1996 (20.26%), 1997 (31.01%), and 1998 (26.67%)

  • 2023 (24.23%) and 2024 (23.31%)

As you’ll note, gains of this magnitude in back-to-back years haven’t occurred in a quarter of a century, and they typically happen about once every generation.

What’s of particular interest is how the stock market has responded in the years subsequent to these outsize returns:

  • Following the two-year gains in 1935-1936, the S&P 500 plunged by 38.59% in 1937.

  • Following 1954-1955, gains slowed to 2.62% in 1956 before a decline of 14.31% for the S&P 500 in 1957.

  • The dot-com bubble was a unique period that saw 1999 (a gain of 19.53%) just miss out on extending this historic streak of gains to five years. But in 2000, 2001, and 2002, the S&P 500 dropped by 10.14%, 13.04%, and 23.37%, respectively.

While there’s not a perfect correlation here, it is worth pointing out that five of the S&P 500’s 16 years of double-digit percentage declines since the Great Depression ended have occurred immediately or shortly after successive 20%-plus gains. This would appear to foreshadow trouble for stocks.

Though there are a couple of highly correlative data points and forecasting tools that have previously been harbingers of downside for the Dow Jones, S&P 500, and Nasdaq Composite, such as the first meaningful year-over-year decline in M2 money supply since the Great Depression, the S&P 500’s Shiller price-to-earnings (P/E) Ratio stands out as perhaps Wall Street’s biggest concern in the new year.


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