The S&P 500’s history shows that despite recessions, wars, inflation, and corrections, the market’s long-term trajectory has remained upward. As the U.S. marks 250 years of resilience, the lesson for investors is clear: wealth is built through patience, discipline and staying invested.
The S&P 500, in its current form, was introduced in 1957, building on Standard & Poor’s earlier 90-stock index, launched in 1926. Over the decades, it has endured recessions, wars, inflation, political division, corrections and bubbles — yet its long-term trajectory has remained upward. Its history is defined not by continuous gains, but by resilience: the capacity to absorb shocks and recover over time.
That lesson feels especially relevant as the U.S. marks its 250th anniversary. Like the market, the country’s history has never been smooth or free of conflict. Yet the broader American story is also one of endurance and long-term progress.
For investors, the message is simple: wealth building is a long-term mindset. Setbacks are inevitable, but history suggests that staying patient, disciplined and invested matters far more than trying to time every rise and fall of the market.