Gauging the Fear Factor: From Volatility Peaks to Equity Returns

From Crisis to Recovery graph

Stock markets have been rattled by trade war tensions and economic uncertainty driven by US tariff policies. Yet history suggests that equities have usually performed well in the aftermath of peak market volatility.

Investors have been coping with acute market swings in recent weeks. Global and US stocks tumbled in the days after US President Donald Trump unveiled his “Liberation Day” tariffs on April 2. Then we saw a dramatic rebound when a 90-day reprieve on most tariffs was announced on April 9, followed by exemptions for electronic equipment such as smartphones and computers. More volatility is likely in the coming weeks while trade policy remains so fluid.

Moments like these are understandably tough for investors to stomach. The pain of severe downturns makes it hard to stay the course, even in the most well-designed long-term investment plan. At the same time, withdrawing from equity markets during steep declines risks locking in losses and forfeiting recovery potential.

How Have Stocks Performed After Very Scary Moments?

History can offer a helpful perspective. It may sound counterintuitive, but during the past quarter century, peak market volatility in very serious crises often gave way to powerful equity market returns in the subsequent 12 months (Display). In months when the VIX Index, an index of US equity market volatility, also known as the fear index, reached between 40 and 50, returns for the MSCI World and S&P 500 averaged 37.4% and 34.4%, respectively, over the next 12 months. And when the VIX breached 50, returns for US and global stocks were also very strong over the following year. Emerging-market equities have also done quite well after VIX peaks. On April 8, the VIX hit 52.3, the highest since the pandemic in March 2020.