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The Dow Jones Industrial Average is surging 1,200 points in midday trading today after Iran agreed to President Trump’s demands to allow for a two-week ceasefire. Previously, Trump had said he would bomb the country back “to the Stone Ages” if they did not agree.
According to a post on X from PolymarketMoney, the 1,200-point advance marks only the 25th time the venerable benchmark index has gained 1,000 points or more intraday since 1896. Curiously, 23 of those 25 instances occurred during Trump’s two terms in office.
So, what does this rare event mean for your portfolio? History delivers a clear answer. Let’s walk through the numbers from the Dow’s data set.
A Surprise Set of Market Leaders Today
You might expect tech stocks to lead the charge after geopolitical relief, but that’s not what is happening. Instead, industrial and consumer names took the spotlight. The three leaders so far are Sherwin-Williams (NYSE:SHW | SHW Price Prediction), rising 6.56%; Caterpillar (NYSE:CAT), up 5.61%; and Home Depot (NYSE:HD), advancing 5.45%.
These moves make sense once you connect the dots. The ceasefire reduces the odds of oil prices climbing and inflation ruining the economy. Lower energy costs directly support companies tied to construction, manufacturing, and home improvement. In short, today’s leaders are exactly the stocks that thrive when tensions ease and input costs stabilize — no fancy sector rotation required.
Short-Term History: Expect Some Give-Back
Historically, when the Dow posts a 1,000-plus point intraday gain, the days that follow often bring a reversion to the mean. Across the prior 24 instances before today, the average return from the close of the big-gain day was a decline of 2.07% the next trading day. Positive closes occurred in only 50% of the cases.
Over the next five trading days, the average declined 3.03%, with gains in just 38% of instances, while after 10 trading days, the figure stood at a drop of 3.28%. Even after 20 trading days — roughly one month — the average return reached a modest 0.31% gain.
That’s a fancy way of saying these outlier up days trigger profit-taking. Seemingly not a big deal for the immediate road ahead, and suggests you shouldn’t buy in trying to jump on the momentum train.
The calculations below use the SPDR Dow Jones Industrial Average ETF Trust (NYSEARCA:DIA), which tracks the Dow index extremely closely.
| Date | Intraday Point Gain | 1-Year DJIA Return (%) |
| 12/26/2018 | 1,086.72 | +25.08 |
| 3/2/2020 | 1,296.81 | +17.66 |
| 3/4/2020 | 1,184.93 | +14.28 |
| 3/10/2020 | 1,169.97 | +29.09 |
| 3/13/2020 | 1,989.14 | +42.21 |
| 3/17/2020 | 1,190.83 | +54.95 |
| 3/24/2020 | 2,145.77 | +56.83 |
| 3/25/2020 | 1,315.02 | +53.82 |
| 3/26/2020 | 1,394.51 | +46.89 |
| 4/6/2020 | 1,730.92 | +47.61 |
| 5/18/2020 | 1,023.12 | +38.70 |
| 6/5/2020 | 1,056.48 | +27.64 |
| 11/9/2020 | 1,610.43 | +24.53 |
| 11/10/2022 | 1,213.79 | +1.70 |
| 11/6/2024 | 1,556.90 | +7.33 |
| 4/8/2025 | 1,461.00 | +26.97 |
| 4/9/2025 | 3,133.11 | N/A |
| 4/22/2025 | 1,101.62 | N/A |
| 4/23/2025 | 1,189.13 | N/A |
| 5/12/2025 | 1,168.67 | N/A |
| 2/23/2026 | 1,260.93 | N/A |
| 3/23/2026 | 1,134.86 | N/A |
| 3/31/2026 | 1,167.26 | N/A |
| 4/8/2026 | 1,217.70 (so far) | N/A |
Source: X @PolymarketMoney. Average 1-year return across completed periods: +32.21%.
The Longer Term View Is Different
If we pull back our lens to one year, however, the data looks very different and becomes much more constructive. For the 16 completed one-year periods after these moves (the other nine instances occurred only last year, so they haven’t completed a full one-year cycle), the Dow returned an average of 32.21%. Every single case closed higher.
The strongest results came after the March 2020 surges. Following the 2,145.77-point gain on March 24, 2020, the index rose 56.83% over the next 12 months. Similar rebounds followed the other 2020 events.
Key Takeaway
Still, investors might not want to put too much stock in the pattern. Believe it or not, 11 of the 24 prior big-gain days clustered in 2020 as the market broke out of the pandemic stock market crash. Those advances had far more to do with the broader market and economic recovery than with any single-day surge itself.
It will be interesting to see if today’s march higher sticks. Last year, the Dow surged 3,133 points on April 9. If today’s 1,200-point gain holds, it would mean a gain of more than 21% for the year.
In any case, today’s 1,200-point jump offers perspective. The ceasefire supplied the spark, short-term dips remain typical, and one-year returns have averaged 32.21% historically. Smart investors focus on their long-term plan rather than chasing a single day’s headlines. No matter how you slice it, patience through volatility has delivered results time and again.