Investors Anticipate Promising 2024: An Analytical Examination

Terry Bingman
Photo: Finoracle.me

2024 Stock Market Forecast: Moderate Double-Digit Gains Expected

Happy New Year! It should be. After 2023’s 26.6% return, 2024 holds more in store. Fortunately, few are lampshade-on-head gleeful. Most investors remain skeptically timid, fretting about all those “risks” you hear abundantly.

As Sir John Templeton legendarily said, “Bull markets are born on pessimism, grow on skepticism, mature on optimism and die on euphoria.”

Today’s skepticism helps. Simply said, it’s far harder to kill a young bull market than almost anyone fathoms. Once they hit a first anniversary (done in October 2023), they almost always get a second.

Hence, my forecast: Moderate double-digit S&P 500 gains, with big growth stocks leading early, and likely twisting to value stock leadership late in 2024. Maybe lampshades dance next December.

Investors Remain Skeptical Despite Promising Outlook

Yes, I know you think that’s stupid. Christmas Day 2022, I detailed here exactly why 2022 was more like 1966 and its bear market than any year ever — and in so many ways — so 2023’s market should react much like 1967 (without flowers in your hair). It did. The S&P’s 1967 total return was 24%. Most all of my 1966-1967 parallels happened: a no capitulation-based stock market bottom, tech led up 58%.

Lessons from Sir John Templeton on Bull Markets

Ongoing inflation slowed to near normal. America’s widely anticipated 2023 recession? Somebody better put it on a milk carton. US GDP accelerated all year. That “Mid-term Miracle” thing I extolled worked perfectly, delivering gridlock’s normal stock market big bang by blocking big, controversial legislation.

While those 1966-68 parallels will start breaking down, 2024 should still resemble 1968 more than most will believe. The S&P 500 should return roughly 11-18%. Again, no recession. Normalized inflation with the Fed claiming victory and cutting rates — but less than many hope.

Why 2024 Could Resemble 1968 for the Stock Market

A Republican, likely Trump, will win the White House. The GOP should take the Senate but probably lose the House (like and unlike 1968). I’ll handicap the political races in May.

Despite histrionics, politics are a 2024 tailwind. Since 1925 (when accurate data start), The S&P 500 climbed in 83.3% of presidential election years. Average returns: 11.4%. (Eerily near 1968’s 11.0%.) When positive, election years averaged 17.0%.

A stunning secret: Whenever the second year of any president’s term was negative, like 2022 was, the next election year, like 2024, has been positive every single time since 1932’s Great Depression bottom. No exceptions! Expect it again!

Political Races and the Influence on the Stock Market

And, of course, early in election years we fear the “wrong guy” wins. That fades. Upon election, overall, we always like the winner better than we originally expected we would — improving sentiment — temporarily.

Our economy? Moderate growth will help finish inflation’s normalization (increased supply from growth is anti-inflationary, not inflationary as economists imagine) and helps growth stocks relative to value, like in 2023. But later year rate cuts likely usher in value stock leadership.

Analyst comment

This news can be evaluated as positive. The analyst predicts moderate double-digit gains in the stock market in 2024, with big growth stocks leading early and a potential shift to value stock leadership later in the year. The skepticism among investors is seen as a positive factor, as it suggests that the young bull market is unlikely to be easily killed. The analyst expects the stock market to resemble the conditions in 1968, with a Republican president winning the White House and positive returns in the election year. The overall outlook for the market is optimistic.

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Terry Bingman is a financial analyst and writer with over 20 years of experience in the finance industry. A graduate of Harvard Business School, Terry specializes in market analysis, investment strategies, and economic trends. His work has been featured in leading financial publications such as The Financial Times, Bloomberg, and CNBC. Terry’s articles are celebrated for their rigorous research, clear presentation, and actionable insights, providing readers with reliable financial advice. He keeps abreast of the latest developments in finance by regularly attending industry conferences and participating in professional workshops. With a reputation for expertise, authoritativeness, and trustworthiness, Terry Bingman continues to deliver high-quality content that aids individuals and businesses in making informed financial decisions.