Here are the odds that the stock market will crash

  • 📰 MarketWatch
  • ⏱ Reading Time:
  • 58 sec. here
  • 2 min. at publisher
  • 📊 Quality Score:
  • News: 26%
  • Publisher: 97%

Россия Новости Новости

Россия Последние новости,Россия Последние новости

A reality check on investors’ current beliefs about the likelihood of a crash.

You almost certainly are exaggerating the likelihood that the stock market will, in coming months, suffer a crash as bad as that of 1987.It’s entirely understandable that investors are worried about a crash, given the many analysts who are declaring the stock market to be forming a bubble.

That means 66.1% of investors believe that the risk is above 10%. And that’s what is plotted in the accompanying chart. Notice that there has been a distinct uptrend in this percentage in recent years. In 2015, its 24-month moving average stood at 64%, versus 74% today — down only slightly from its high from last year of 77%.

Why investors have become increasingly worried about a crash A big reason for the secular uptrend in investors’ belief in the likelihood of a crash is that the stock market suffered two bear markets in a recent two-and-a-half-year period: February-March 2020 and January-October 2022. It’s rare for two bear markets to occur in such quick succession, and that has soured many investors’ long-term outlooks.

In her study, “Asymmetric Learning from Financial Information,” she reports that there is a significant difference between how investors update their beliefs following losses than how they do that following gains: Losses generate disproportionately more pessimism than gains lead to optimism. This tendency, rooted deep in how our brains work, leads to what she calls a “pessimism bias.

 

Спасибо за ваш комментарий. Ваш комментарий будет опубликован после проверки
Мы обобщили эту новость, чтобы вы могли ее быстро прочитать.Если новость вам интересна, вы можете прочитать полный текст здесь Прочитайте больше:

 /  🏆 3. in RU

Россия Последние новости, Россия Последние новости