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Worried About a Stock Market Crash? History Says Don’t Sweat It.

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So far in 2026, the S&P 500 index (SNPINDEX: ^GSPC) is down roughly 7%, but the ride has felt much worse, as a series of events has hampered market returns. Whether it’s the Iran war and the volatile oil prices that followed, persistent tariff and inflation concerns, a weakened consumer in a K-shaped recovery, or the potential for interest rates to rise and further hinder the housing market, there’s no shortage of reasons to worry about a possible stock market crash.

That said, three historical indicators suggest investors shouldn’t panic — especially long-term investors who are looking to hold stocks for decades. Here are those three indicators and why they combine to give me all the confidence I need to keep adding money to the market every week, even amid the market’s current tumult.

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This historical indicator is the most peculiar of the trio to me, but I find it fascinating (and a confidence booster) nonetheless. LPL Financial found that since 1950, when the S&P 500 delivers positive returns in January, it goes on to post positive returns for the full year 89% of the time. In these years, the index has risen an average of 16.7%. With the S&P 500 rising 1.5% in January this year, history suggests the odds lean in our favor for 2026.

That said, there’s no clear reasoning for why this indicator generates such strong results. It could be investor optimism at the start of the year, broader market momentum, New Year’s psychology, or astrology (joking, I think). Regardless of the reason, an 89% hit rate is too impressive to ignore, especially given a sample size of 75 years. While I wouldn’t advise building a quantitative investing strategy around the January barometer, it is a nice feather in the cap of long-term investors looking to add to stocks this year.

A notebook sits on a wooden table, next to a small plant in a pot, with "Focus on the Long Term" written in blue across its pages.
Image source: Getty Images.

Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist with the Carson Group, compiled a list of dozens of geopolitical and historical events (shock events) that occurred since 1940. He found that despite some of these events being the darkest days in recent history, the median market return of the S&P 500 12 months later was up 7.4%. Even in the face of these challenges, the market was higher one year later 63% of the time — which almost exactly matches the notion that the broader U.S. market rises two years in every three.



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