Skip to content

In our recent publication, Quick Thoughts: Why are equity markets sinking?, Stephen Dover explored the catalysts behind the recent market correction, highlighting (geo)political tensions, macroeconomic concerns, and the potential risk of stagflation.

The US equity market has now corrected by approximately 10%, prompting investors to question whether this downturn presents an attractive buying opportunity or signals deeper underlying risks.1

To address this question, we shift our focus to technical and sentiment indicators, which form an essential part of our investment decision-making toolkit.

By analyzing market price action, we aim to better understand investor behavior. Our focus is on asset prices. As we show below, an examination of supply and demand indicators provides insights into the likelihood of a market rebound or further setback.

We begin with an historic perspective. Since 1950, the S&P 500 Index has experienced 38 corrections, defined as declines of 10% or more. Of these, 26 occurred during periods of positive economic growth, while 12 took place during recessions (Exhibit 1).

Exhibit 1: All S&P 500 Index Corrections Since 1950

Sources: S&P Global, Bloomberg, Macrobond. Analysis by Franklin Templeton Institute. As of March 15, 2025. Indexes are unmanaged and one cannot directly invest in them. They do not include fees, expenses and sales charges. Past performance is not an indicator or a guarantee of future results. Important data provider notices and terms available at www.franklintempletondatasources.com.

For each of these corrections, we then calculate the S&P 500’s returns over the subsequent 12 months and classified those outcomes based on whether they occurred during a recession or not. We then constructed average return trajectories to illustrate the typical S&P 500 performance following a 10% (or greater) correction.

As Exhibit 2 shows, on average, the market rose 13%, on average, from its trough following non-recessionary market corrections.

Exhibit 2: S&P 500 Index Trajectories During Market Corrections

Sources: S&P Global, Bloomberg, Macrobond. Analysis by Franklin Templeton Institute. As of March 15, 2025. Indexes are unmanaged and one cannot directly invest in them. They do not include fees, expenses and sales charges. Past performance is not an indicator or a guarantee of future results. Important data provider notices and terms available at www.franklintempletondatasources.com.

Our findings also reveal a key tactical consideration. On average, the market has bottomed within a few days of a 10% drawdown, irrespective of whether recession followed or not. And while market recoveries during recessions have tended to be weaker, during non-recessionary corrections the market typically has rebounded and set fresh highs over the ensuing 12 months.

Notably, the ongoing correction has been rapid. The S&P 500 has shed 10% of its value in just 16 days, making it the fifth-fastest correction since 1950.

That is unsettling. But history does not suggest that the speed of the decline impairs the recovery, as shown in Exhibit 3. Historically, the market has bottomed within two months following its peak, and has recovered to new highs within six to seven months.

Exhibit 3: Fastest 10% Decline From the One-Year Highs

Sources: S&P Global, Bloomberg, Macrobond. Analysis by Franklin Templeton Institute. As of March 15, 2025. Indexes are unmanaged and one cannot directly invest in them. They do not include fees, expenses and sales charges. Past performance is not an indicator or a guarantee of future results. Important data provider notices and terms available at www.franklintempletondatasources.com.

Not just prices: Fundamentals repriced as well

Beyond history, there are other reasons to believe the market may soon regain its footing. The recent market selloff compressed valuation multiples. For example, the forward price-to-earnings (P/E) ratio of the S&P 500 has slipped from 22.5 to 18 during this correction. Similarly, forward P/Es for technology and small-cap indexes have declined to one-year lows.

Exhibit 4: Fundamental Investors Might Find the Current Repricing Attractive

Sources: S&P Global, Bloomberg, Macrobond. Analysis by Franklin Templeton Institute. As of March 15, 2025. Indexes are unmanaged and one cannot directly invest in them. They do not include fees, expenses and sales charges. Past performance is not an indicator or a guarantee of future results. Important data provider notices and terms available at www.franklintempletondatasources.com.

Falling multiples indicate that stock prices are falling faster than earnings expectations. For long-term value-oriented investors, lower valuations present an opportunity to buy fundamentally resilient companies at a discount.

Extremely negative sentiment

Moreover, investor sentiment has turned sharply negative, as reflected in recent AAII surveys, where the percentage of bears has climbed to 60%, a level reached only a few times in history, and typically around major market bottoms (see Exhibit 5).

Interestingly, extreme pessimism is typically only seen in corrections of 20% or greater but is already present after today’s 10% decline. Sentiment is already at extreme levels.

History suggests that fear often creates opportunities for long-term investors willing to accept near-term volatility in exchange for future price appreciation. With valuations now more attractive and sentiment deeply negative, this may be one of those moments.

Exhibit 5: Investor Sentiment Reaches Extreme Negative Levels—but is This Bearish?

Sources: S&P Global, Bloomberg, Macrobond. Analysis by Franklin Templeton Institute. As of March 15, 2025. Indexes are unmanaged and one cannot directly invest in them. They do not include fees, expenses and sales charges. Past performance is not an indicator or a guarantee of future results. Important data provider notices and terms available at www.franklintempletondatasources.com.

Other measures of sentiment concur. Our proprietary Fear & Greed Index (Exhibit 6) signals that investors are deeply concerned, which is typically a good contrarian indicator. Similar readings in the past have marked attractive entry points to add equity exposure.

Exhibit 6: Fear and Greed: Z-Score Model

Sources: S&P Global, CBOE, Fed, US Treasury, Macrobond. Analysis by Franklin Templeton Institute. As of March 15, 2025. Important data provider notices and terms available at www.franklintempletondatasources.com.

High volatility provides opportunity

Similarly, periods of elevated volatility often create dislocations in and within markets, creating opportunity for long-term investors. This past week volatility spiked, with the CBOE VIX index2 reaching an intraday high of 29.57 on consecutive days, a level historically associated with heightened fear and uncertainty. But as history shows, when volatility reaches extremes, it has often marked attractive entry points for investors.

The chart in Exhibit 7 highlights that past episodes of the VIX above 27.8 (end-of-day measure) have occurred only 12% of the time and have typically coincided with strong subsequent market performance, generating, on average, 19% return over the ensuing 12 months.

Exhibit 7: Volatility Index Has Spiked to Extreme Levels

Sources: S&P Global, CBOE, Bloomberg, Macrobond. Analysis by Franklin Templeton Institute. As of March 15, 2025. Indexes are unmanaged and one cannot directly invest in them. They do not include fees, expenses and sales charges. Past performance is not an indicator or a guarantee of future results. Important data provider notices and terms available at www.franklintempletondatasources.com.

Additional concerns: short-term economic pain

President Trump has recently suggested that he is willing to accept short-term economic pain —even a recession—to achieve longer-term policy goals. As a result, recession fears have become one of the main risks weighing on Wall Street. However, we believe it is far from clear how a recession would help resolve trade imbalances, nor do we see a recession as a likely near-term outcome.

In fact, a snapshot of February’s incoming data paints a very different picture from the increasingly negative sentiment. Remaining data-driven, we note that the most recent employment data confirm that the job market remains on solid footing. Moreover, as the latest Consumer Price Index report showed, consumer prices rose at a slower pace than expected in February, keeping the door open for further rate cuts. Currently, markets are pricing in three cuts in 2025.

As shown in Exhibit 2, recoveries have tended to be faster and more substantial following non-recessionary corrections, while corrections that occur during recessions have typically more prolonged. Therefore, we believe it is important to emphasize that the Institute does not expect the US economy to enter a recession.

Broadening remains our key message

Notably, despite the recent market selloff, the distribution of market returns continues to broaden, underscoring our key equity investment thesis of 2025.

The equal-weighted S&P 500 Index has outperformed both the market capitalization-weighted S&P 500 Index and the Nasdaq this year by 2.36% and 4.45%, respectively.3

As we highlighted in our recent piece, Get ready for a broader US equity market, the conditions for broadening remain in place. Despite noisy headlines and elevated geopolitical uncertainty, value has  outperformed growth and there has been a significant rotation across different segments of the market. Going forward, we expect a broadening trend to continue in the United States, as well as globally (e.g., European outperformance).

In sum, corrections offer opportunity. Moreover, if we assume the US and world economies avoid a recession, the recent market correction and bout of volatility present an ideal opportunity for long-term investors to increase equity exposure to our broadening market theme.



IMPORTANT LEGAL INFORMATION

This material is intended to be of general interest only and should not be construed as individual investment advice or a recommendation or solicitation to buy, sell or hold any security or to adopt any investment strategy. It does not constitute legal or tax advice.

The views expressed are those of the investment manager and the comments, opinions and analyses are rendered as at publication date and may change without notice. The information provided in this material is not intended as a complete analysis of every material fact regarding any country, region or market.

Data from third party sources may have been used in the preparation of this material and Franklin Templeton Investments (“FTI”) has not independently verified, validated or audited such data. FTI accepts no liability whatsoever for any loss arising from use of this information and reliance upon the comments opinions and analyses in the material is at the sole discretion of the user.

Products, services and information may not be available in all jurisdictions and are offered outside the U.S. by other FTI affiliates and/or their distributors as local laws and regulation permits. Please consult your own professional adviser or Franklin Templeton institutional contact for further information on availability of products and services in your jurisdiction.

Investments entail risks, the value of investments can go down as well as up and investors should be aware they might not get back the full value invested.

Issued in Luxembourg by Franklin Templeton International Services S.à r.l. Investors can also obtain these documents free of charge from any of the following local authorised FTI representatives: Switzerland: Issued by Franklin Templeton Switzerland Ltd, Talstrasse 41, CH-8001 Zurich.

Australia: Issued by Franklin Templeton Australia Limited (ABN 76 004 835 849, AFSL 240827), Level 47 120 Collins Street, Melbourne, Victoria, 3000. Austria/Germany: Issued by Franklin Templeton Investment Services GmbH, Mainzer Landstraße 16, D-60325 Frankfurt am Main, Germany. Authorised in Germany by IHK Frankfurt M., Reg. no. D-F-125-TMX1-08. Tel. 08 00/0 73 80 01 (Germany), 08 00/29 59 11 (Austria), Fax: +49(0)69/2 72 23-120, [email protected]Canada: Issued by Franklin Templeton Investments Corp., 5000 Yonge Street, Suite 900 Toronto, ON, M2N 0A7, Fax: (416) 364-1163, (800) 387-0830, www.franklintempleton.ca. Netherlands: Issued by Franklin Templeton International Services Sàrl, Dutch branch, NoMA House, Gustav Mahlerlaan 1212, 1081 LA, Amsterdam. United Arab Emirates: Issued by Franklin Templeton Investments (ME) Limited, authorized and regulated by the Dubai Financial Services Authority. Dubai office: Franklin Templeton Investments, The Gate, East Wing, Level 2, Dubai International Financial Centre, P.O. Box 506613, Dubai, U.A.E., Tel.: +9714-4284100 Fax:+9714-4284140. France: Issued by Franklin Templeton France S.A., 20 rue de la Paix, 75002 Paris France. Hong Kong: Issued by Franklin Templeton Investments (Asia) Limited, 17/F, Chater House, 8 Connaught Road Central, Hong Kong. Italy: Issued by Franklin Templeton International Services S.à.r.l. – Italian Branch, Corso Italia, 1 – Milan, 20122, Italy. Japan: Issued by Franklin Templeton Investments Japan Limited. Korea: Issued by Franklin Templeton Investment Trust Management Co., Ltd., 3rd fl., CCMM Building, 12 Youido-Dong, Youngdungpo-Gu, Seoul, Korea 150-968. Luxembourg/Benelux: Issued by Franklin Templeton International Services S.à r.l. – Supervised by the Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier - 8A, rue Albert Borschette, L-1246 Luxembourg - Tel: +352-46 66 67-1- Fax: +352-46 66 76. Malaysia: Issued by Franklin Templeton Asset Management (Malaysia) Sdn. Bhd. & Franklin Templeton GSC Asset Management Sdn. Bhd. Poland: Issued by Templeton Asset Management (Poland) TFI S.A.; Rondo ONZ 1; 00-124 Warsaw. Romania: Issued by Bucharest branch of Franklin Templeton Investment Management Limited (“FTIML”) registered with the Romania Financial Supervisory Authority under no. PJM01SFIM/400005/14.09.2009,, and authorized and regulated in the UK by the Financial Conduct Authority. Singapore: Issued by Templeton Asset Management Ltd. Registration No. (UEN) 199205211E. 7 Temasek Boulevard, #38-03 Suntec Tower One, 038987, Singapore. Spain: FTIS Branch Madrid, Professional of the Financial Sector under the Supervision of CNMV, José Ortega y Gasset 29, Madrid, Spain. Tel +34 91 426 3600, Fax +34 91 577 1857. South Africa: Issued by Franklin Templeton Investments SA (PTY) Ltd which is an authorised Financial Services Provider. Tel: +27 (21) 831 7400 ,Fax: +27 (21) 831 7422. Switzerland: Issued by Franklin Templeton Switzerland Ltd, Talstrasse 41, CH-8001 Zurich. UK: Issued by Franklin Templeton Investment Management Limited (FTIML), registered office: Cannon Place, 78 Cannon Street, London EC4N 6HL Tel +44 (0)20 7073 8500. Authorized and regulated in the United Kingdom by the Financial Conduct Authority. Nordic regions: Issued by Franklin Templeton International Services S.à r.l. , Contact details: Franklin Templeton International Services S.à.r.l., Swedish branch c/o Cecil Coworking, Norrlandsgatan 10, 111 43 Stockholm, Sweden. Tel +46 (0)8 545 012 30, [email protected], authorised in the Luxembourg by the Commission de Surveillance du Secteur Financier to conduct certain financial activities in Denmark, in Sweden, in Norway, in Iceland and in Finland. Offshore Americas: In the U.S., this publication is made available only to financial intermediaries by Templeton/Franklin Investment Services, 100 Fountain Parkway, St. Petersburg, Florida 33716. Tel: (800) 239-3894 (USA Toll-Free), (877) 389-0076 (Canada Toll-Free), and Fax: (727) 299-8736. Investments are not FDIC insured; may lose value; and are not bank guaranteed. Distribution outside the U.S. may be made by Templeton Global Advisors Limited or other sub-distributors, intermediaries, dealers or professional investors that have been engaged by Templeton Global Advisors Limited to distribute shares of Franklin Templeton funds in certain jurisdictions. This is not an offer to sell or a solicitation of an offer to purchase securities in any jurisdiction where it would be illegal to do so.
Please visit www.franklinresources.com to be directed to your local Franklin Templeton website.

CFA® and Chartered Financial Analyst® are trademarks owned by CFA Institute.