The Arizona Republic

As ‘sleepy’ markets doze, bull tiptoes along

U.S. stocks haven’t suffered a pullback for more than a year

- @adamshell USA TODAY Adam Shell

Stocks keep hitting new highs in an unusually calm market that hasn’t flashed a fasten-your-seatbelt warning in more than a year.

The U.S. market hasn’t suffered a 5% drop — the common definition of a “pullback” — since the Brexit vote shocked investors in late June 2016. And that was 268 trading days ago.

The broader stock market hasn’t gone that long without a scare since the mid-1990s, when the Standard & Poor’s 500 stock index ended a pullback-free streak of 394 days in July 1996, according to data from Bostonbase­d LPL Financial.

It’s only the sixth time since 1950 the large-company stock gauge has made it at least a year without a 5% drop, says Ryan Detrick, senior market strategist at LPL.

“This is one of the most sleepy markets in history,” he says.

The S&P 500, which closed fractional­ly lower Thursday at 2473.45, has gained 21.5% since its Brexit low. That big return means a Main Street investor with $100,000 invested in the index on June 28, 2016, would now have an account balance of $121,500.

Turbulence in the stock market, history shows, has been a fairly regular occurrence. Since 1950, the average intra-year decline has been 13.6%. And in more than 90% of those years the market slid at least 5%.

The long pause between spooky declines is one reason why Detrick says the market could be susceptibl­e to a fall of 5% to 7% at any time.

Hank Smith, co-chief investment officer at Radnor, Pa.-based Haverford Trust, says investors should always be on the lookout for a bout of turbulence.

“You know volatility is going to come back, you just don’t know when or what will cause it,” Smith says.

Investment pros such as Detrick attribute the market calm to a number of factors.

Market stability, they say, has been underpinne­d by a world of low interest rates, tame inflation and improving economies around the globe.

Those favorable business conditions and low odds of a U.S. recession, analysts such as Smith say, have been a boon for corporate profitabil­ity, the main driver of stock prices.

The collective earnings growth for companies in the S&P 500 in the first three months of the year was 15.3%, which is its most robust pace since 2011, according to earnings-tracker Thomson Reuters.

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