S&P 500 Recovers Sharply After Unexpected GDP Contraction
By: cointribuneen|2025/05/03 07:30:02
0
Share
What if markets followed a tempo that escapes economic logic? While the US GDP is declining, the S&P 500 is bouncing back after a sharp drop of nearly 20 %. This unexpected turnaround, fueled by contradictory signals, intrigues even in trading rooms. Indeed, at BNP Paribas, strategists wonder: does this rapid correction fit into a global tradition ? To understand it, they dive back into a century of stock market crash history. A Crash Without Recession? Between February 19 and April 8, 2024, the S&P 500 index lost nearly 20 %, falling from 6,144.15 to 4,982.77 points. This downward sequence, which BNP Paribas analysts called the “Tariff Crash” , attracted their attention because of its size, but also its context. Greg Boutle, Bénédicte Lowe, and Aurélie Dubost write in a note published this Friday : They add: “Crashes that occur without a marked economic slowdown can be significant and volatile, but tend to be relatively short-lived.” By tracing market movements back to the 1920s using Dow Jones data, the authors show that significant drops can occur even without a major macroeconomic shock. Several conjunctural elements have confirmed this interpretation and supported the rebound observed at the end of the studied period : The three main US stock indices posted weekly gains close to 3 %, just two days after the announcement of a GDP contraction in the first quarter (-0.3 %) ; Treasury bond yields jumped as investors abruptly reversed their bets on a slowdown ; The April employment report showed 177,000 job additions, a figure above expectations, while the unemployment rate remained stable at 4.2 % ; Beijing was considering restarting trade talks with the United States, easing tariff-related tensions ; Midweek market behavior, notably a spectacular bullish turnaround in the Dow and the S&P 500, highlighted the resilience of stocks despite a deteriorated macroeconomic environment. A Fragile Rebound and Lingering Uncertainties While BNP Paribas’s historical analysis tends to mitigate the severity of the “Tariff Crash” , strategists do not overlook the structural vulnerabilities that could plunge markets back into turmoil. In the same note, they warn of an alternative scenario: “stocks could retest their annual lows if a combination of downward earnings revisions and multiple compression materializes.” Multiple compression, which means a decline in stock valuations tied to earnings outlooks, could indeed challenge the current rebound, especially if growth deteriorates further. A resurgence of the market thus rests on an unstable balance between hopes for a de-escalation in trade tensions, conjunctural resilience, and corporate earnings momentum. Moreover, the authors remind us that economic forecasts, even those supported by long-term analyses, can prove to be out of sync with reality. “In 2022, our model projected an S&P 500 around 3,000 and VIX reaching 40 by mid-2023,” they note, before emphasizing that these levels were ultimately never reached. This observation calls for caution regarding current predictions. Especially since other signals, such as the sharp rise in bond yields observed late last week, indicate the market continues to oscillate between fear of a sudden slowdown and hope for a soft landing. Thus, any macroeconomic surprise or a resurgence of trade tensions could abruptly reverse the current trend. Ultimately, while the S&P 500’s rebound seems to validate the hypothesis of a crash without recession, the balance remains precarious. The precedent of 2022 reminds us that even the best-constructed scenarios can be contradicted by facts. For investors, the lesson is clear: market resilience should not be interpreted as a free pass. Between encouraging signs and lingering uncertainties , the coming weeks will be decisive in deciding between a simple technical correction and a deeper economic turnaround.
You may also like
XRP Ledger hits 1M AI payments as Ripple-backed t54.ai launches hub
Aptos Network Vulnerability Exposed $70 Billion to $3,000 Attack
What is a flash loan? Borrowing millions with zero collateral, explained
AI is Changing Employment Expectations in the U.S., Fed May Remain Cautious
Crypto Long & Short: With MSTR concerns assuaged, look to traditional signals around BTC
What are RWA perpetuals? Trading stocks and commodities as crypto perps
OpenAI lands GPT-5.6 approval as traders rush pre-IPO futures
What is liquidation in crypto? Margin calls, health factors, and how positions die
Venezuela entrusts taxes to 'cryptocurrency expert' - is USDT under scrutiny?
US Power Grid Issues Red Alert Amid Heatwave, Is Bitcoin Mining the Scapegoat?
Central Banks, Parliaments, and Atlantic Players at the Euro Stablecoin Table
What are tokenized stocks? How equities are moving on-chain, explained
Zcash Co-founder Wants More Than 21 Million Bitcoins
Bankers Filed Suspicious Activity Report Over Farage's £5M Gift From Tether Billionaire
Analysis: Bitcoin May Enter a Phase of Bottoming Out, Selling Does Not Trigger Panic
BNB Chain builds new Layer 1 for agentic trading, targets 2027 mainnet
Witnesses of South Korea's 'Golden Era': Foreign Capital Profits, Retail Investors Take Over
The Quality of Currency Depends on the Credibility of Its Issuer
XRP Ledger hits 1M AI payments as Ripple-backed t54.ai launches hub
Aptos Network Vulnerability Exposed $70 Billion to $3,000 Attack
What is a flash loan? Borrowing millions with zero collateral, explained
AI is Changing Employment Expectations in the U.S., Fed May Remain Cautious
Crypto Long & Short: With MSTR concerns assuaged, look to traditional signals around BTC
What are RWA perpetuals? Trading stocks and commodities as crypto perps
Customer Support:@weikecs
Business Cooperation:@weikecs
Quant Trading & MM:bd@weex.com
VIP Program:support@weex.com
