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The S&P 500 Is on Track to Do Something for Only the 4th Time in 100 Years. What Does This Mean for Investors in 2025?

The S&P 500 (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) is up 27% in 2024, as of Dec. 9. Barring a catastrophic market crash in the final three weeks of the year, this will be a celebrated above-average year for the stock market.

It wouldn’t only represent a great year for the stock market, but it would also represent a spectacular two-year run for the S&P 500. Consider that it went up by 24% in 2023. And if it finishes up by more than 24% again for the year — as it is right now — then this two-year run will be in rarefied company.

As it turns out, the S&P 500 has only increased in value by 24% or more during three other two-year periods: 1935-1936, 1954-1955, and 1997-1998. As things stand now, 2023-2024 would be the fourth time it’s happened.

In short, the S&P 500 is on pace to achieve something truly historical. And investors all want to know what it means for returns in 2025.

With the S&P 500 at an all-time high, investors are getting nervous. Many are likely sitting on some nice gains, and they want to sell stocks before a market crash. This is usually why they want to know what historical trends show.

I think this is the wrong approach, as I’ll explain. But even in this case, investors looking for historical clues to sell at the perfect time might be disappointed.

The table shows what happened the last three times that the S&P 500 rose by 24% or more two years in a row.

Time period

Year 1

Year 2

Year 3

1935-1937

41%

28%

(39%)

1954-1956

45%

26%

3%

1997-1999

31%

27%

20%

2023-2025

24%

27%*

TBD

Data source: S&P Dow Jones Indices. Table by author. *Returns year-to-date as of Dec. 9.

Will the market rise big, crash, or stay relatively flat in 2025? Well, in the past, all three things have happened. The odds of these options are consequently equal when looking at the historical trend.

When you think about it, the only thing that really stands out from these strong two-year periods is that the market still rose in two of the three following years. But this insight isn’t anything special. In fact, the stock market has gone up more than two-thirds of the time over the last century.

In short, based on 1937, 1956, and 1999, investors shouldn’t be surprised if the S&P 500 rises again in 2025. But investors should usually expect the market to rise anyway, because that’s what regularly happens.

If you’re a value-minded investor, as I am, you might nevertheless be worried that stocks are generally overvalued. And indeed, there are multiple metrics that I could point out that would show that stocks are too expensive. But waiting for a pullback before buying any stock could still be problematic.


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