How the stock market defied expectations again this year, by the numbers
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[December 27, 2024]
NEW YORK (AP) — What a wonderful year 2024 has been for investors.
U.S. stocks ripped higher and carried the S&P 500 to records as the
economy kept growing and the Federal Reserve began cutting interest
rates.
The year featured many familiar winners, such as Big Tech, which got
even bigger as their stock prices kept growing. But it wasn't just
Apple, Nvidia and the like. Bitcoin, gold and other investments also
drove higher.
Here's a look at some of the numbers that defined the year. All are as
of Dec. 20.
1998
Remember when President Bill Clinton got impeached or when baseball's
Mark McGwire hit his 70th home run against the Montreal Expos? That was
the last time the U.S. stock market closed out a second straight year
with a leap of at least 20%, something the S&P 500 is on track to do
again this year. The index has climbed 24.3% so far this year, not
including dividends, following last year's spurt of 24.2%.
57
The number of all-time highs the S&P 500 has set so far this year. The
first came early, on Jan. 19, when the index capped a two-year comeback
from the swoon caused by high inflation and worries that high interest
rates instituted by the Federal Reserve to combat it would create a
recession. But the index was methodical through the rest of the year,
setting a record in every month outside of April and August, according
to S&P Dow Jones Indices. The latest came on Dec. 6.
3
The number of times the Federal Reserve has cut its main interest rate
this year from a two-decade high, offering some relief to the economy.
Expectations for those cuts, along with hopes for more in 2025, were a
big reason the U.S. stock market has been so successful this year. The 1
percentage point of cuts, though, is still short of the 1.5 percentage
points that many traders were forecasting for 2024 at the start of the
year. The Fed disappointed investors in December when it said it may cut
rates just two more times in 2025, fewer than it had earlier expected.
1,508
That’s how many points the Dow Jones Industrial Average rose by the day
after Election Day, as investors made bets on what Donald Trump’s return
to the White House will mean for the economy and the world. The more
widely followed S&P 500 soared 2.5% for its best day in nearly two
years. Aside from bitcoin, stocks of banks and smaller winners were also
perceived to be big winners. The bump has since diminished amid worries
that Trump’s policies could also send inflation higher.
$100,000
The level that bitcoin topped to set a record above $108,000 this past
month. It's been climbing as interest rates come down, and it got a
particularly big boost following Trump's election. He's turned around
and become a fan of crypto, and he's named a former regulator who’s seen
as friendly to digital currencies as the next chair of the Securities
and Exchange Commission, replacing someone who critics said was overly
aggressive in his oversight. Bitcoin was below $17,000 just two years
ago following the collapse of crypto exchange FTX.
26.7%
Gold's rise for the year, as it also hit records and had as strong a run
as U.S. stocks. Wars around the world have helped drive demand for
investments seen as safe, such as gold. It's also benefited from the
Fed's cut to interest rates. When bonds are paying less in interest,
they pull away fewer potential buyers from gold, which pays investors
nothing.
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People walk past the New York Stock Exchange on Nov. 26 2024. (AP
Photo/Peter Morgan, File)
$420
It's a favorite number of Elon Musk, and it's also a threshold that
Tesla's stock price passed in December as it set a record. The
number has a long history among marijuana devotees, and Musk
famously said in 2018 that he had secured funding to take Tesla
private at $420 per share. Tesla soared this year, up from less than
$250 at the start, in part because of expectations that Musk's close
relationship with Trump could benefit the company.
$91.2 billion
That's how much revenue Nvidia made in the nine months through Oct.
27, showing how the artificial-intelligence frenzy is creating
mountains of cash. Nvidia's chips are driving much of the move into
AI, and its revenue through the last nine months catapulted from
less than $39 billion the year before. Such growth has boosted
Nvidia's worth to more than $3 trillion in total.
74%
GameStop’s gain on May 13 after Keith Gill, better known as “Roaring
Kitty,” appeared online for the first time in three years to support
the video game retailer’s stock, which he helped rocket to
unimaginable heights during the “ meme stock craze ” in 2021.
Several other meme stocks also jumped following his post in May on
the social platform X, including AMC Entertainment. Gill later
disclosed a sizeable stake in the online pet products retailer
Chewy, but he sold all of his holdings by late October.
1.6%, 3.0% and 3.1%
That's how much the U.S. economy grew, at annualized seasonally
adjusted rates, in each of the three first quarters of this year.
Such growth blew past what many pessimists were expecting when
inflation was topping 9% in the summer of 2022. The fear was that
the medicine prescribed by the Fed to beat high inflation — high
interest rates — would create a recession. Households at the lower
end of the income spectrum in particular are feeling pain now, as
they contend with still-high prices. But the overall economy has
remained remarkably resilient.
20.1%
This is the vacancy rate for U.S. office buildings — an all-time
high — through the first three quarters of 2024, according to data
from Moody's. The fact the rate held steady for most of the year was
something of a win for office building owners, given that it had
marched up steadily from 16.8% in the fourth quarter of 2019. Demand
for office space weakened as the pandemic led to the popularization
of remote work.
3.73 million
That's the total number of previously occupied homes sold nationally
through the first 11 months of 2024. Sales would have to surge 20%
year-over-year in December for 2024's home sales to match the 4.09
million existing homes sold in 2023, a nearly 30-year low. The U.S.
housing market has been in a sales slump dating back to 2022, when
mortgage rates began to climb from pandemic-era lows. A shortage of
homes for sale and elevated mortgage rates have discouraged many
would-be homebuyers.
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