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Will the Stock Market’s 2021 Returns Crush 2020’s?

Stocks continued their 2021 ascent on Friday, with gains for all three of the major market indexes.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average, S&P 500, and Nasdaq Composite all spent time in negative territory during the day, but a late-day push boosted them to set a trio of all-time records.

IndexPercentage ChangePoint Change
Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJINDICES:^DJI)0.18%57
S&P 500 (SNPINDEX:^GSPC)0.55%21
Nasdaq Composite (NASDAQINDEX:^IXIC)1.03%135

The strong Friday session finished an extremely healthy first week of the year for the stock market. Now, some optimistic investors are wondering whether 2021 could be an even better year for markets than 2020.

Weekly gains for markets

When you add up the performance for the week, the Nasdaq once again reigned supreme. All three benchmarks rose between 1.5% and 2.5% for the week, with the Dow lagging as it did throughout last year.

Obviously, if you project those returns out for a 52-week year, you can draw all sorts of crazy conclusions. Notwithstanding the immense positive momentum we saw in 2020, there’s simply no way that the stock market is going to consistently rise as quickly as it did this week.

The good news, though, is that thus far, the rise for stocks has been extremely broad:

There’s considerable excitement in the investing community. Whether that will translate into big gains beyond the first week of the year depends on several factors.

Leaving 2020 behind

The most important question in 2021 will be whether companies bounce back fully from the economic disruptions of the COVID-19 pandemic. If the U.S. can effectively and promptly administer vaccines, then chances of controlling the coronavirus will improve, potentially setting up favorable comparisons for 2021 against pandemic-hit 2020 figures. However, if the vaccination program stalls and case counts remain high, then this year could be even worse than 2020.

In addition, investors should keep in mind that beating the market depends on which market you’re talking about. The Dow was up less than 10% even after taking dividend income into consideration, the S&P almost doubled that gain with an 18% rise, and the Nasdaq soared almost 45% on a total return basis. It’s more likely that we’ll see 2021 returns in the teens than that we’ll get another 40% to 50% jump.

Finally, despite last year’s gains, many stocks are still sharply lower from where they were this time last year. For them, even getting back to even would be a huge accomplishment. Meanwhile, highfliers with huge gains last year might have built up high hopes, but just holding onto a high stock price would be a win for long-term investors.

2021 has gotten off to a strong start, but there will inevitably be bumps in the road along the way. Here’s hoping that we all have a happy, healthy, and prosperous year, regardless of what the stock market does. 

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