Stocks have never posted a losing year after a midterm election since 1950. Here’s why that matters heading into 2026 elections.

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By Don Lair Published
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Markets hate uncertainty. But they have a remarkably consistent way of handling it.

Since 1950, the S&P 500 has not posted a single negative one-year return in the 12 months following a midterm election. Not one. Through 19 midterm cycles spanning Eisenhower to Biden — across recessions, oil shocks, impeachments, wars and a financial crisis — the post-midterm year has been a green one. Every time.

That stat has been making the rounds on Wall Street again as 2026 heats up, and for good reason. The midterm year itself is historically the worst year of the four-year presidential cycle for stocks. The post-midterm year is one of the best. With Election Day approaching and prediction markets giving Democrats a real shot at a sweep, investors are about to find out whether the pattern holds for a 20th time in a row.

Why midterm years are so messy

Markets don’t like guessing what tax rates, regulations or trade policy will look like a year from now. Midterm elections inject a maximum dose of that uncertainty. The president’s party has lost an average of 27 House seats and three Senate seats across the last 23 midterm cycles. That’s a lot of legislation getting rewritten, committees changing hands and regulatory priorities getting reshuffled.

The result is what analysts call the “midterm discount.” Stocks tend to trade flat or choppy for most of the year, with elevated volatility, before snapping out of it in the fourth quarter once results are clear.

Why the year after is usually strong

Once the votes are counted, capital gets back to work. The post-election period removes the single biggest source of policy uncertainty for two years. Investors who sat on cash through the fall start putting it to work. Companies that delayed expansion plans pull the trigger. The S&P 500’s average return in the 12 months after a midterm has been well above its long-run average.

It doesn’t matter much, historically, which party wins. What matters is that someone wins.

The 2026 wrinkle: united vs. divided

There is one nuance worth knowing for this cycle. Academic research has identified what’s called the “government gap” in market returns: united governments — when one party controls the White House and both chambers of Congress — have historically delivered higher excess stock returns than divided governments. The effect is even more pronounced for small-cap stocks, which suffer more when legislative gridlock stalls deal-making and capital projects.

That’s relevant in 2026 because a Democratic sweep would flip Washington from divided control to a unified Democratic government. Whatever your politics, the historical data suggests markets generally do better when the gridlock breaks — in either direction.

The caveats

A 19-for-19 streak sounds bulletproof. It isn’t. Nineteen data points is a small sample by statistical standards, and the post-midterm year hasn’t been tested against the specific cocktail facing 2026: sticky inflation, an oil shock tied to the Iran conflict, stretched valuations at roughly 22 times forward earnings, a Federal Reserve under fresh leadership and a “K-shaped” economy where AI capital spending and consumer spending are diverging sharply.

Past performance, the disclaimer goes, is not a guarantee of future results.

What to do with this

The takeaway isn’t to bet the farm on a post-midterm rally. It’s to resist the urge to panic-sell into election volatility. History suggests the path of least resistance for stocks runs through the fourth quarter and out the other side.

In other words: the worst part of the cycle is usually the part everyone is afraid of. The best part comes right after.

Photo of Don Lair
About the Author Don Lair →

Don Lair writes about options income, dividend strategy, and the kind of boring-but-durable investing that actually funds retirement. He's the founder of FITools.com, an independent contributor to 24/7 Wall St., and a former writer for The Motley Fool.

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