Here is something potentially quite positive for stocks in 2023...
WHEN THE FIRST FIVE DAYS OF THE YEAR (THRU NEXT MONDAY, NOT THRU THIS FRIDAY) HAVE BEEN UP 1.2% OR MORE FOR THE S&P500, then there is an overwhelming chance the markets will finish the year positive. The source of my data is the Stock Trader's Almanac for 2023 (pg. 16) and I am pointing out something that they didn't mention in this detail in the book.
So, if the markets were up 1.2% or more in the first five trading days of the new year, then (over the 73-year period from 1950 to 2022) the market finished positive a whopping 25 times and down only 2 times! Also, 22 of the 25 up years were gains of 12.3% or more. Furthermore, 14 of the gains ranged from 18.9% to 38.1%, truly very nice performance for many.
WHEN THE FIRST FIVE DAYS OF THE YEAR WERE UP BY ANY AMOUNT, then the S&P finished the year up 39 times and down only 8.
WHEN THE FIRST FIVE DAYS OF THE YEAR WERE NEGATIVE, the S&P500 finished the year up 14 times and down 12. So it was still up 53.8% of the time, even after a lousy start.
BUT WAIT THERE IS MORE. Consecutive losing years, in spite of what people may think, doesn't happen very often. Since 1950, this only happened in 1973-74 (Vietnam era) and 2000-01-02 (a 3 year pullback after a huge run in the late 1990's, huge expenses due to Y2K fortification expenses by many companies, and the dot com meltdown after stocks like Pets.com that weren't even profitable went nuts). In other words, once we had a down year, over the following year the market was up 16 times and down only 3!
By the way, the S&P being down 0.4% today is of no real consequence IMHO. The first five days combined are what I am looking at.
Disclaimers: Obviously, the media can be very biased. I try to stick to facts as best as possible. Keep in mind that the market could go down, say, 20% in the first part of the year before staging a big rally to finish the year positively. Therefore, staging your way into positions of real companies that are profitable gives you a better chance (generally) than going all in without having the resources to withstand a pullback. I'm not making any comments on crypto- not a fan of something that is virtual. I am NOT a cheerleader for the bulls by any means. For instance, I currently have a short position in Southwest Airlines (LUV) where I am betting on the company's stock price to go down over the next month or so.