(Reuters) – U.S. stock markets will deliver among the steepest recoveries in their history over the next year, returning to levels from before March’s coronavirus lockdowns more than twice as fast as after the 2008 financial crisis, according to analysts from U.S. bank Citigroup.
In a note to clients dated Monday, the bank forecast the S&P 500 <.spx> index and Dow Jones Industrial Average <.dji> index would stand at 3,160 points and 28,400 points respectively in June 2021, up about 7% and 15.5% from current levels.
The forecast is among the most bullish among U.S. market forecasters, many of whom are forecasting next to no gains for the next 12 months.
Citigroup’s forecast would see the two indexes recoup 81% and 90% of the losses they suffered from February’s record peaks in 465 days, or a little over 15 months. The equivalent recovery after the 2008 crash took the S&P 500 1,107 days and the Dow 1,288 days.
The optimistic targets reflect expectations for improved economic performance next year and in 2022, analyst Tobias Levkovich said in the note.
“Embedded in the forecast is an expectation for COVID-19 vaccines and treatments that lift many of the hindrances to ‘back to normal’ practices that still are in place currently,” he said. “While some industries could face permanent long-term damage, the Great Pause will reverse itself as time progresses.”
After the 1987 stock market crash the indexes also took more than 18 months to make such recoveries, though both then and in 2008, the losses also took longer than this time around.
Citi does include a note of caution, calling out unemployment, the U.S. presidential election and possibly tighter lending standards as risks, and expects a pullback before year’s end.
However, the forecasts are no comparison to the market performance after the Great Depression, when it took the Dow Jones 22 years to recover 90% of its pre-crash level.
The S&P 500 closed at 2,953.91 points on Monday and the Dow Jones at 24,597.37. [.N]
(Reporting by Tanvi Mehta in Bengaluru and Tom Westbrook in Singapore; Editing by Patrick Graham and Shounak Dasgupta)