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Blog Your guide to financial planning and retirement
March 13, 2026 • 5 minutes
When markets get shaky, it can feel like something unprecedented is happening. Headlines grow dramatic. Predictions get louder. And the urge to do something can grow quickly.
In moments like this, there is one very simple chart that can bring the conversation back to reality: the long-term trajectory of the S&P 500. It doesn’t predict the future. But it provides something equally valuable — context.
The chart above tracks the S&P 500 over many decades. The downturns you see are periods that felt terrifying at the time:
Each moment triggered fear, uncertainty, and predictions that the financial system might not recover.
And yet, zoomed out, the pattern becomes clear. Despite wars, recessions, inflation, political upheaval, and global pandemics, the long-term direction of markets has been upward.
The longest recovery period for the S&P 500 to regain its previous nominal high was after the 1929 crash, which took about 25 years (1929–1954).
However, most modern recoveries have been much shorter.
Here are some of the major ones:
The key insight? Modern market recoveries have typically taken between 3–7 years. But planning for retirement means acknowledging that longer recovery periods are possible.
Another important lesson from the long-term market chart is how quickly markets can rebound.
Historically, a surprisingly large portion of the market’s long-term gains have occurred during a relatively small number of trading days. Some of the strongest market rallies often happen very close to major downturns, sometimes within days or weeks of the worst declines.
Because those recoveries can happen quickly and unpredictably, investors who sell during periods of fear may risk missing some of the most important market gains.
Research frequently shows that missing just a handful of the best-performing days in the market over long periods can significantly reduce overall returns.
This is one of the reasons long-term investors often focus less on trying to time market movements and more on maintaining a diversified portfolio that allows them to stay invested through different market cycles.
Market downturns are uncomfortable, but they are also normal.
Historically:
In other words, volatility is not a bug in the system — it’s part of how markets work.
Looking at the long-term chart helps remind us that what feels like a major crisis in the moment may appear as a relatively small dip years later.
The most extreme recovery period in modern market history came after the 1929 crash. The stock market peaked in 1929, collapsed during the Great Depression, and did not return to its previous high until 1954 — about 25 years later.
That’s an extraordinary example, and many factors contributed to it: the Depression, bank failures, World War II, and a very different economic system than we have today.
Still, the lesson is valuable. Markets can take years to recover. And a strong financial plan should be able to withstand that possibility.
Fortunately, you don’t need to predict the future to protect yourself.
You simply need to structure your assets thoughtfully.
A good financial plan recognizes that not all money has the same job.
One helpful way to think about this is through a time-based allocation strategy.
Money needed soon should generally be held in lower-risk assets like:
This protects you from needing to sell stocks during a downturn.
Funds that may be needed in the coming decade are often placed in balanced portfolios, such as:
These aim to grow modestly while reducing volatility.
Money that won’t be needed for many years can often remain invested primarily in equities.
Historically, long time horizons have allowed investors to ride through downturns and benefit from long-term growth.
The next time markets feel uncertain, try this simple practice:
If the answer is no, the best move may simply be to stay disciplined and keep moving forward.
Markets will always experience turbulence. That volatility is the price investors pay for long-term growth.
But history shows that patient investors who remain diversified and focused on long-term goals have repeatedly navigated periods of uncertainty.
Sometimes the most powerful thing you can do during a market downturn isn’t to react.
It’s simply to zoom out.
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