Good morning! Itâs Friday and weâre covering what usually happens after the stock market drops like just did, why Nvidia looks cheap right now, and Scott Bessentâs latest comments. First time reading? Join 190,000 self-directed investors gaining an edge every morning. Sign up here.Â
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In investing, as in life, bad news gets better when you zoom out.
The S&P 500âs rapid decline into correction territory â down 10% from its February 19 peak â has confirmed the jitters of already-spooked investors.
Fueled by uncertainty surrounding tariffs and inflation, the drop through Thursday marks the fastest correction since the pandemic crash in early 2020.
In fact, as Callie Cox of Ritholtz Wealth Management highlighted on X, the S&P 500âs latest drop is the seventh-fastest into correction levels since 1950.
Still, if history is any guide, a correction isnât likely to cause a lasting downturn.
The S&P 500 is down 1% over the last 6 months (Chart: OpenBB)
This level pullback typically occurs every year for markets that otherwise tend to move up and to the right.
Dating back to 2008, the S&P 500 has averaged a 5% gain in the six months after a correction, and a 15.3% gain after 12 months, according to Dow Jones data cited by Morningstar.
In other words, this is a familiar story that often ends well.
Panic leads to selling, which drags on valuations; bargain hunters scoop up stocks, then recovery ensues.Â
The market isnât just a pricing machine. Itâs a barometer that fluctuates between fear and greed.Â
To be fair, the current backdrop may justify some of the fear. President Trump continues to jolt markets with on-again, off-again tariffs, and investorsâ concerns around economic growth are real.Â
Then again, the S&P 500 has seen a drawdown between 5% and 15% in more than one-quarter of all trading days since 1950, according to LPL Financial chief technical strategist Adam Turnquist.Â
On the other hand, he noted, a mere 8% of trading days have been record highs.Â
âThe average market loss during a correction is about 13%, and historically, that loss has been recovered over a period of about four months,â wrote strategists at Weitz Investment Management in a report.
đ˘Â The âdetoxâ period for the economy doesnât have to mean recession. Thatâs what Treasury chief Scott Bessent said Thursday. He reiterated his view that current government spending is âunsustainable,â and that the administration is aiming to have a smooth transition period into the new-era economy. (CNBC)
đ Producer price inflation cooled in February. Thursday data showed the core PPI, which tracks price changes for companies excluding food and energy, rose 3.4% from a year ago, down from the 3.6% seen in January. One day earlier, Februaryâs CPI also showed its lowest print in four years. (Yahoo Finance)
đ°ď¸Nvidia now looks cheap by historical standards. The AI stock is down double-digits to start the year, and its trading around 23.3 times the per-share earnings expected the next 12 months. Thatâs below its five-year historic average â and itâs also cheaper than Netflix, Starbucks, and Walmart. (Barronâs)
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Rapid-fire:
President Trump says âI think itâll happenâ on US annexation of Greenland (CNBC)
Both Goldman Sachs and Yardeni Research â a typically-bullish Wall Street firm â lowered their S&P 500 price targets for the year (TKer)
The Trump familyâs crypto venture has discussed doing business with Binance (Bloomberg)
Gold touched a new record high and Wall Street analysts see that rally continuing (Yahoo Finance)
A judge ruled that Trump must reinstated fired federal workers at six agencies (Barronâs)
European alcohol stocks dropped Thursday after the White House threatened 200% tariffs (WSJ)
Last thing:
Liz Young Thomas @LizThomasStrat
The S&P 500 is *only* 11% off its 52-week (and all-time) high, but nearly half of S&P 500 stocks are 20% or more off their 52-week highs.
5:52 PM ⢠Mar 13, 2025
210 Likes 44 Retweets
18 Replies
About me:
đ° Iâm Phil Rosen, co-founder and editor-in-chief of Opening Bell Daily. Iâve published books, lived on three continents, and won awards for my journalism, which has appeared in Business Insider, Fortune, Yahoo Finance, Bloomberg and Inc. Magazine.
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