It remains to be seen if October will maintain its reputation as a bear-market killer, but so far so good. The Dow Jones Industrial Average is on pace to log one of its best Octobers in decades, while the broader S&P 500 has delivered impressive gains of its own.
Even the Nasdaq Composite, while lagging the other two major indexes by wide margins, is chipping in handsomely. And that’s despite the tech-heavy index laboring under the weight of truly dismal performances from its largest components.
Indeed, the Dow itself has shrugged off selloffs in tech constituents such as Apple (AAPL (opens in new tab)) and Microsoft (MSFT (opens in new tab)) to generate double-digit percent gains for the month.
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But what’s most encouraging is what has historically come next when the Dow produces a boffo October: the blue-chip barometer has gone on to generate even more impressive upside over the following three-, six- and 12-month periods.
The Dow entered the final trading day of October up 14.4%. That’s the best performance since 1976, according to Ryan Detrick, chief market strategist at Carson Group. Have a look at the three major benchmark’s October returns as of 10/28:
(Image credit: YCharts)
The Dow’s historical performance from here, however, is where things get really interesting. As Detrick notes, since World War II, whenever the Dow has logged a gain of at least 10% in October, it has gone on to do great things. Have a look at the table below, courtesy of Carson Group.
(Image credit: Ryan Detrick, Carson Group)
If past is prologue, there is an 82% chance that the Dow will be higher both three months and six months from now, and a 73% chance that it will be higher rather than lower in 12 month’s time. Even better are the magnitude of the Dow’s returns.
As you can see in the above table, the Dow’s three-month average return following a 10%+ October gain is 5.6%. Six months out, the average increase hits 10.7%. And as for a year later? The Dow has delivered an average return of 15.9%.
Past performance, as we all know too well, is not indicative of future returns. There are no guarantees that the Dow’s excellent October of 2022 will translate into outsized gains in the months and year ahead.
Nevertheless, this is indeed an extremely encouraging historical fact. And goodness knows, the market needs all the reasons for optimism it can get right about now.