When stock markets fall, investment values tracking those markets fall proportionally. A 20% market fall means a £20,000 portfolio temporarily shows £16,000. This is a paper loss — not realised until you sell. Historically, diversified equity markets have recovered from every significant crash. The most common mistake is selling during a fall, which converts a temporary paper loss into a permanent realised one. Continuing regular contributions during falls means you buy more units at lower prices — one of the genuine benefits of pound-cost averaging.
Market falls are inevitable, frequent, and one of the most psychologically challenging aspects of investing. They're also one of the most important to prepare for — because the decisions made during a fall (mostly: doing nothing) determine long-term outcomes more than any investment selection made during calm markets.
What a Market Fall Actually Means
When "markets fall 15%," every investment tracking those markets falls roughly 15%. A £10,000 portfolio temporarily becomes £8,500. The key word is "temporarily" — this is a paper loss. The same units of the same fund you held before the fall you still hold after. What's changed is the price at which those units are currently valued.
The loss becomes permanent only if you sell. Until then, it exists on a screen, not in your actual financial position.
Historical Perspective on Falls and Recoveries
- 2008-09 financial crisis: MSCI World fell approximately 50%. Recovery to previous peak: 3-5 years.
- 2020 COVID crash: Global equities fell 30-35% in weeks. Recovery to new highs: within months.
- 2022 combined equity/bond fall: Global equities fell roughly 20%; unusually, bonds also fell. Partial recovery through 2023-24.
- 2025-26 geopolitical volatility: FTSE 100 and global indices experienced sharp swings. Long-term investors who held steady came through.
Every significant market crash in investment history has been followed by recovery and eventual new highs for diversified portfolios. The critical variable is having a time horizon long enough to wait for recovery.
The Sell-During-Falls Trap
Selling during a market fall is understandable emotionally and usually wrong financially. The mechanics:
- You sell at a loss — the loss is now realised and permanent
- You hold cash while waiting for the market to "settle"
- The market's best days often arrive suddenly and without warning during or immediately after severe downturns
- You miss the recovery
- You buy back at higher prices than you sold
Research shows missing just the 10 best trading days in a decade can reduce long-term returns by approximately 50%. These best days typically occur during or immediately after periods of maximum fear — exactly when investors who've sold are watching from the sidelines.
Our guide on investing in a volatile market covers the specific strategies for maintaining discipline during downturns.
What to Actually Do When Markets Fall
- Long-term investors (10+ year horizon): usually nothing. If your allocation was right before the fall, it's probably still right.
- Continue or increase regular contributions: falling prices mean each monthly investment buys more units at lower prices — pound-cost averaging at its most beneficial.
- Check your allocation, not your portfolio value: if a 20% fall caused genuine anxiety suggesting your equity allocation was too high, that's useful information for adjusting — once markets recover, not during the fall.
Frequently Asked Questions
Should I move to cash when recession warnings appear?
Almost certainly not. By the time recession warnings are prominent in news headlines, markets have typically already fallen significantly to price in the expected downturn. Selling on news means selling after much of the fall has already happened, then typically missing the recovery.
How long should I expect to wait for markets to recover?
Historical recovery timelines range from months to 5+ years depending on the severity of the crash. For globally diversified portfolios, recoveries have historically been shorter than for single-country portfolios. This is why a 10+ year horizon is the baseline for equity investing.
For historical context on market recoveries across different periods, Schroders' market history perspective provides evidence-grounded analysis.
