Wednesday 29 May 2019

Investopedia/James Chen: What Is a Correction?

Investopedia                                                  Investing                                                         Investing Strategy
Correction
Reviewed by James Chen
Updated May 13, 2019
What Is a Correction?

In the world of investments, a correction is generally defined as a decline of 10% or greater in the price of a security from its most recent peak. Corrections can happen anywhere including individual stocks, the indexes that follow stocks or sectors, the commodities and currency markets, or any asset that trades on an exchange.

An asset, index, or market may fall into a correction either briefly or for sustained periods—days, weeks, months, or even longer. However, the average market correction is short-lived and lasts anywhere between three and four months.

Investors, traders, and analyst use charting methods to predict and track corrections. Many factors can trigger a correction. From a large-scale macroeconomic shift to problems in a single company's management plan, the reasons behind a correction are as varied as the stocks, indexes, or markets they affect.
How a Correction Works

Corrections are like that spider under your bed. You know it's there, lurking, but don't know when it will make its next appearance. While you might lose sleep over that spider, you shouldn't lose sleep over the possibility of a correction.

According to a 2018 CNBC report, the average correction for the S&P 500 lasted only four months and values fell around 13% before recovering. However, it is easy to see why the individual or novice investor may worry about a 10% or greater downward adjustment to the value of their portfolio assets during a correction. They didn't see it coming and don't know how long the correction will last. For most investors, in the market for the long term, a correction is only a small pothole on the road to retirement savings. The market will eventually recover, so, they should not panic.

Of course, a dramatic correction that occurs in the course of one trading session can be disastrous for a short-term or day trader and those traders who are extremely leveraged. These traders could see significant losses during times of corrections.

No one can pinpoint when a correction will start, end, or tell how drastic of a drop prices will take until after it's over. What analyst and investors can do is look at the data of past corrections and plan accordingly.
Key Takeaways

    A correction is a decline of 10% or greater in the price of a security, asset, or a financial market.
    Corrections can last anywhere from days to months, or even longer.
    While damaging in the short term, a correction can be healthy, adjusting overvalued asset prices and providing buying opportunities.

Charting a Correction

Corrections can sometimes be projected using market analysis, and by comparing one market index to another. Using this method an analyst may discover that an underperforming index may be followed closely by a similar index that is also underperforming. A steady trend of these similarities may be a sign that a market correction is imminent.

Technical analysis review price support and resistance levels to help predict when a reversal or consolidation may turn into a correction. Technical corrections happen when an asset or the entire market get overinflated. Analysts use charting to track the changes over time in an asset, index, or market. Some of the tools they use include the use of Bollinger Bands, envelope channels, and trendlines to determine where to expect price support and resistance.
Preparing Investments for a Correction

Before a market correction, individual stocks may be strong or even overperforming. During a correction period, individual assets frequently perform poorly due to adverse market conditions. Corrections can create an ideal time to buy high-value assets at discounted prices. However, investors must still weigh the risks involved with purchases, as they could well see a further decline as the correction continues.

Protecting investments against corrections can be difficult, but doable. To deal with declining equity prices, investors can set stop-loss orders or stop-limit orders. The former is automatically triggered when a price hits a level pre-set by the investor. However, the transaction may not get executed at that price level if prices are falling fast. The second stop order sets both a specified target price and an outside limit price for the trade. Stop-loss guarantees execution where stop-limit guarantees price. Stop orders should be regularly monitored, to ensure they reflect current market situations and true asset values. Also, many brokers will allow stop orders to expire after a period.
Investing During a Correction

While a correction can affect all equities, it often hits some equities harder than others. Smaller-cap, high-growth stocks in volatile sectors, like technology, tend to react the strongest. Other sectors are more buffered. Consumer staples stocks, for example, tend to be business cycle-proof, as they involve the production or retailing of necessities. So if a correction is caused by, or deepens into, an economic downturn, these stocks still perform.

Diversification also offers protection—if it involves assets that perform in opposition to those being corrected, or those that are influenced by different factors. Bonds and income-vehicles have traditionally been a counterweight to equities, for example. Real or tangible assets, like commodities or real estate—are another option to financial assets like stocks.

Although market corrections can be challenging, and a 10% drop may significantly hurt many investment portfolios, corrections are sometimes considered healthy for both the market and for investors. For the market, corrections can help to readjust and recalibrate asset valuations that may have become unsustainably high. For investors, corrections can provide both the opportunity to take advantage of discounted asset prices as well as to learn valuable lessons on how rapidly market environments can change.
Pros

    Creates buying opportunities into high-value stocks

    Can be mitigated by stop-loss/limit orders

    Calms over-inflated markets

Cons

    Can lead to panic, overselling

    Harms short-term investors, leveraged traders

    Can turn into prolonged decline

Real World Examples of a Correction

Market corrections occur relatively often. Between 1980 and 2018, the U.S. markets experienced 37 corrections. During this time, the S&P 500 fell an average of 15.6%. Ten of these corrections resulted in bear markets, which are generally indicators of economic downturns. The others remained or transitioned back into bull markets, which are usually indicators of economic growth and stability.

Take the year 2018, for example. In February 2018, two major indexes, the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) and the Standard & Poor's 500 (S&P 500) index, both experienced corrections, dropping by more than 10%. Both the Nasdaq and the S&P 500 also experienced corrections in late October 2018.

Each time, the markets rebounded. Then another correction occurred Dec. 17, 2018, and both the DJIA and the S&P 500 dropped over 10%—the S&P 500 fell 15% from its all-time high. Declines continued into early January with predictions that the U.S. had finally ended a bear market abounding.

The markets began to rally, erasing all the year's losses by the end of January. As of mid-April 2019, the S&P 500 was up about 20% since the dark days of December. Optimistic analysts are saying the bull market still has legs to run, though a few pessimists fear the upswing could be a short-lived bear market rally—or to use another animal metaphor a dead cat bounce.
Related Terms
Short Selling is Risky But Rewarding
Short selling is an investment or trading strategy. Short selling occurs when an investor borrows a security, sells it on the open market, and expects to buy it back later for less money. Short sellers bet on, and profit from, a drop in a security's price.
more
Warren Buffet's 90/10 Strategy Targets Safe Portfolio Allocation
90/10 is an investment strategy which deploys 90% of investment capital to low-risk interest-bearing instruments, and 10% to higher-risk investments.
more
Aggressive Investment Strategy Definition
An aggressive investment strategy is a means of portfolio management that attempts to maximize returns by taking a relatively higher degree of risk.
more
Buy The Dips Definition and Examples
Buying the dips is a phrase that refers to purchasing an asset following a decline in price. Such an action has both pros and cons, and should be utilized as part of a complete trading plan.
more
Taking Stock of Overvalued Stocks
Overvalued stocks are defined as equities with a current price that experts expect to drop because its earnings outlook or price-earnings ratio do not justify it.
more
Learn About What an Opening Price Is
The opening price is the price at which a security first trades upon the opening of an exchange on a trading day.
more
Related Articles

Investing Strategy
Prospering in the Next Bear Market: Here's How

Investing Strategy
Structured Notes: Buyer Beware!

Investing Strategy
How a Stop-Loss Order Helps Investors Sleep at Night

Investing Strategy
Has the Efficient Market Hypothesis been proven correct or incorrect?

Investing Strategy
Can You Earn Money in Stocks?

Investing Strategy
What is the history of the S&P 500?

    About Us
    Advertise
    Contact
    Privacy Policy
    Terms of Use
    Careers

Investopedia is part of the Dotdash publishing family.

    The Balance
    Lifewire
    TripSavvy
    The Spruce
    and more

No comments: