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  1. Interactive chart of the Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA) stock market index for the last 100 years. Historical data is inflation-adjusted using the headline CPI and each data point represents the month-end closing value.

    • S&P 500

      The current price of the S&P 500 as of April 22, 2024 is...

    • Dow Jones By Year

      Stock Market Performance by President. ... Dow Jones YTD...

    • NASDAQ Composite

      Interactive chart of the NASDAQ Composite stock market index...

  2. Annotated chart of stock market history 1928 to present for the S&P 500 with CAPE, MC/GDP, Q-Ratio, Dividend Yield, 10 Year Treasury Rates, and CPI.

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    • 1920
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    • 1928
    • 1929

    - Return on S&P Composite index: -12.34% - Return on 3-month Treasury bills: 5.42% On Sept. 16, a bomber killed 30 people on Wall Street in the heart of New York's financial district. Trading was cancelled for the day, and although anarchists were primary suspects, the case was never solved.

    - Return on S&P Composite index: 22.70% - Return on 3-month Treasury bills: 4.83% After World War I, a depression ran from early 1920 to the summer of 1921. By some measures, stock prices were cut in half and unemployment affected almost 20 percent of the American labor force. When the market rebounded, the Roaring ʼ20s took off.

    - Return on S&P Composite index: 29.67% - Return on 3-month Treasury bills: 3.47% Beginning in 1922 and lasting until 1929, gross national product grew annually at 4.7 percent, setting off the Roaring ʼ20s. In addition, industrial production grew annually at 3.1 percent, and the unemployment average was 3.7 percent. At year's end, the stock market ...

    - Return on S&P Composite index: 2.13% - Return on 3-month Treasury bills: 3.93% In 1923, Calvin Coolidge became president of the United States after the death of Warren G. Harding. During Coolidge's first year in office, minimum wage laws mandated for women were declared unconstitutional, and he had to combat a major united coal strike. Stocks con...

    - Return on S&P Composite index: 26.05% - Return on 3-month Treasury bills: 2.71% The height of the Roaring ʼ20s began in 1924. Throughout the next five years, the Dow Jones Industrial Average quadrupled. In November, Calvin Coolidge was re-elected president of the United States.

    - Return on S&P Composite index: 21.04% - Return on 3-month Treasury bills: 3.03% The stock market closed 1925 at its highest price ever, at 151.08. Also this year, the Chrysler Corporation was founded, and automakers soon became some of the biggest drivers of Wall Street.

    - Return on S&P Composite index: 13.93% - Return on 3-month Treasury bills: 3.23% At 157.20, the Dow closed at its highest mark ever in 1926. However, that figure would be nothing compared to the next two years, when the Dow closed at over 200 and then 300. NBCand Schick were among the future business titans to open up shop this year.

    - Return on S&P Composite index: 38.15% - Return on 3-month Treasury bills: 3.10% In 1927, RCA became a pioneer in television and several other new technologies created a stock market bubbleover the next two years. General Motors also introduced its Cadillac division's LaSalle line, and with TV and cars becoming more prevalent, unprecedented opulen...

    - Return on the S&P 500: 43.81% - Return on 3-month Treasury bills: 3.08% Allied Van Lines, Delta Air Lines, Farmers Insurance, and Playskool were just some of the companies founded in 1928, as American business was booming and people wanted to get in on the thriving stock market. The Dow jumped more than 49 percent from 1927, but a cloud was loomi...

    - Return on the S&P 500: -8.3% - Return on 3-month Treasury bills: 3.16% Oct. 28, 1929, is remembered as Black Monday, when the stock market dropped 13 percent. The following day, the market fell 12 percent. The 1929 high of 381.17would not be reached again until the 1950s. The great crash of 1929 led America into a financial spiral, precipitated b...

  4. Dec 21, 2023 · The good news is that the S&P 500 has seen +11.5% average historical returns since 1928. Overall, the majority of stock market cycles take place in bull territory both in terms of net return appreciation and length of time by a wide margin.

  5. 1928: 48.22: 1927: 28.75: 1926: 0.34: 1925: 30.00: 1924: 26.16: 1923-3.25: 1922: 21.74: 1921: 12.72: 1920-32.90: 1919: 30.45: 1918: 10.51: 1917-21.71: 1916-4.19: 1915: 81.66: 1914-5.43: 1913-10.34: 1912: 7.58: 1911: 0.39: 1910-17.86: 1909: 14.97: 1908: 46.64: 1907-37.73: 1906-1.92: 1905: 38.20: 1904: 41.74: 1903-23.61: 1902-0.42: 1901-8.70 ...

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