Historical (1995-2020) trend analysis of S&P 500 Peaks & Valleys
Spent some time this weekend looking at all of the historical data from the S&P 500 back to 1995. I was looking for some basic trends that could help potentially predict what the current market is going to do. My general trend analysis shows that the market likes to move up with a long up-trend followed by short, steep down-trend. The pattern is very consistent across the entire 25 years at both the micro and macro scale. I estimated the trends to pick out a ratio of uptrend, peak, down trend, bottom. I then took a look at how each of these trends compared to the one following it (rebound). I did the analysis in excel (pasted below, sorry for the formatting).
What does all of this say? Well, the mean ratio of days up vs days down is 30%. This is a very consistent value with a standard deviation of 8%. The important of the ratio is that it does not matter how long the trend lasts. What matters is that once you find a peak, then a bottom is expected to come 30% * Days_Up. The drop for COVID-19 was not a "market" driven crash, so the peak and drop do not fit the model. However, the subsequent trend we are in right now is! That means once we can establish the rebound peak (next few days or weeks), then we can predict with some level of certainty when the "correction" or next bottom will occur. For example, if the peak happens tomorrow, then the rebound low will be sometime between 5/22 and 5/30.
In addition, we can also take a look at the peak to bottom % change. That value is much harder to nail down. If varies wildly over each of the trends for the past 25 years. The current drop was 3386 to 2241 or 34%. All of the drops after 2007 have only been a max of 20%. In all of those cases the rebound peak was higher. However, the rebound low following that rebound peak was lower 80% of the time!!! The only drops of the same scale are the dot com and housing market bubbles, but they were much more severe at 49% and 57%. Their rebound peaks where lower by around 23% and the rebound low was around 30% lower!
What does that mean? Well, excluding the 2 times where the rebound low was higher, then we will see a rebound low any where from -14% to -26% lower than the peak. If the peak happens on 5/12, then we could see the S&P 500 have a rebound peak around 2957 (about what it is now) and low between 2710-2518 around the end of May.
Well that is my $0.02 any way. It is probably a better guess than what you get from those so called experts that "have called 10 of the last 5 recessions" that I keep seeing in the news without any numbers to back up their predictions. My confidence is moderate on my analysis, but we all know the market can be very irrational. So, take my analysis with a block of salt :) Hope it helps in some useful way.
I AM SORRY FOR THE FORMATING. TradingView just mashed all of the numbers together without any useful formatting
Number of rebound peak/bottom pairs that where higher/lower with respect to previous peak Total 12 Total 12 Higher 10 83% Higher 2 17% Lower 2 17% Lower 10 83%
Most likely value at bottom following peak (COVID-19) 3386 2241 1145 34% Mean+Std 4246 860 25% Higher Mean+Std 3704 318 9% 3386 2241 1145 34% Mean 3594 208 6% Higher Mean 3111 -275 -8% Most realistic -> Hit 2957 2X and it is 62% Fib. Level 3386 2241 1145 34% Mean-Std 2942 -444 -13% Lower Mean-Std 2518 -868 -26% Lower 3386 2241 1145 Mean 2912 -474 -14% Next most likely -> 2730 is major support/resistance line 3386 2241 1145 Split diff 2710 3386 2241 1145 Mean-Std 2508 -878 -26%
Most likely date of bottom following peak (COVID-19) Business days Calendar weeks Calendar days Date 13.3 2.66 18.6 5/30/2020 Mean+Std Most realistic to occur at end month 5/12/2020 35 10.4 2.08 14.5 5/26/2020 Mean 7.5 1.50 10.5 5/22/2020 Mean-Std
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