Updated
Updated · The Motley Fool · Jul 15
Motley Fool Urges 10-Year Stock Horizon as S&P 500 Posts 86% Five-Year Return
Updated
Updated · The Motley Fool · Jul 15

Motley Fool Urges 10-Year Stock Horizon as S&P 500 Posts 86% Five-Year Return

3 articles · Updated · The Motley Fool · Jul 15

Summary

  • An 86% total return for the S&P 500 over the past five years underpins Motley Fool's advice to stay invested for the next decade rather than react to bear-market fears.
  • High valuations are driving concern, but the report argues market timing usually backfires because no one can reliably predict when the next downturn will hit.
  • A 20% drawdown has struck the S&P 500 numerous times over recent decades, while 10% pullbacks arrive roughly every couple of years and have historically been recovered.
  • The benchmark was down 7% in 2026 as of March 30 before rebounding, reinforcing the case for buying quality stocks, diversifying and holding through volatility.

Insights

With valuations mirroring past crashes, is the classic 'stay the course' advice dangerously outdated for today's investor?
The S&P 500 soars while quality stocks are 'orphaned.' What is causing this great divide, and which side will win?
Is the market's massive bet on a few AI giants creating a historic bubble, or a permanent economic shift?