Deutsche Bank’s Henry Allen argues that the S&P 500’s modest pullback versus past Oil shocks reflects markets pricing a short conflict, resilient macro data and still‑dovish central banks. He notes the index is only 5–6% below record highs and highlights historical episodes, including 1979–80, 1990–91 and 2022, where S&P 500 drawdowns were followed by relatively swift recoveries.
"For now, risk assets are still holding up much better than in history’s recent oil shocks."
"S&P 500 and Europe’s STOXX 600 are “only” 5-6% beneath their record highs."
"For example, the US jobs report for March, the first covering the period since the strikes began on Feb 28, had nonfarm payrolls up by +178k, the strongest in 15 months, with unemployment ticking down to 4.3%."
"In 1979-80, after the second oil shock, there was market turbulence as Paul Volcker hiked rates aggressively and a US recession took place in early 1980."
"Even in 2022, which was a more significant bear market as global central banks hiked rates aggressively, that was followed by a strong recovery in 2023, with the S&P 500 at a new record by early 2024."
(This article was created with the help of an Artificial Intelligence tool and reviewed by an editor.)