The U.S. stock market has generally done well after prior government shutdowns have ended.
Tariffs, the trade war, and fears about inflation and the job market muddy the waters when it comes to forecasting the market's direction in the near term.
The government shutdown is in its fourth week as I write this article -- and it's now the second-longest such shutdown in American history. Plenty of people have been suffering throughout the first three weeks, not receiving their paychecks, the government services they needed, or, in some cases, both. About 900,000 federal workers have been furloughed.
A government shutdown is a big deal, so you might expect that the stock market would be freaking out over it. That hasn't been the case, though, so far. The market, as measured by the benchmark S&P 500 index, has oscillated somewhat since the start of the shutdown on Oct. 1, dropping by a couple of percent at times, but as of the close of trading on Thursday, it was more or less flat for the period.
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What might be next for the stock market? Here are some thoughts.
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According to the Motley Fool's research into shutdowns and the stock market, there isn't a clear pattern for how the stock market performs during a shutdown. There have been more than 20 federal shutdowns and funding gaps from 1976 to 2020, and while they were ongoing, the market has experienced everything from a 4.4% loss to a 10.3% gain. Most shutdowns after 1990 did feature gains, though.
Here's how the stock market behaved after some past shutdowns, per data from CNBC.com and Morningstar:
Those numbers certainly give us an idea of how the stock market might react once this shutdown ends. It's not always how it works, though: A year after the end of the three-day Trump shutdown in January 2018, the S&P 500 was down 3%, and following a four-day shutdown in November 1981, the S&P 500 dropped by 5.5% in the next 100 days.
For context, remember that the S&P 500's average annualized returns have been close to 10% over many decades.
It's worth keeping in mind that this current shutdown is happening in an environment of high tariffs coming and going, and general worries about inflation and the job market. Every shutdown has its own circumstances, and Trump's disruptions of many established U.S. trade arrangements have some investors worried.
That said, it looks like interest rates will keep falling for a while, which tends to be good for the stock market, as it makes borrowing easier for companies -- not to mention individuals.
The bottom line is that while history suggests that the stock market might be just fine once this shutdown is over, there are no guarantees. No one really knows, and history has also shown us that the stock market can be volatile.
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