equities

S&P 500 Falls 5% as Dip Buying Gains Momentum

FC
Fazen Capital Research·
7 min read
1,645 words
Key Takeaway

S&P 500 down ~5.0% to Mar 29, 2026; 10-yr yield up ~42bps to 4.12% on Mar 26, 2026 — tactical, sector-aware dip buying may be warranted.

Lead paragraph

The S&P 500 has recorded a roughly 5% decline into late March 2026, prompting renewed debate among institutional investors over whether buying the dip is warranted. Price action through March 29, 2026 shows equity indices retrenching after a multi-month advance, with headline indices reacting to tighter financial conditions and re-pricing in interest rate expectations (Yahoo Finance, Mar 29, 2026: https://finance.yahoo.com/markets/stocks/articles/why-buying-market-dip-now-223000954.html). Market participants cite a 42 basis-point rise in the 10-year Treasury yield to about 4.12% on March 26, 2026 and slower-than-expected corporate guidance as proximate catalysts (U.S. Treasury, Mar 26, 2026: https://home.treasury.gov). The shift in yields has compressed valuation multiples: the S&P 500 forward P/E has contracted from approximately 18.6x in mid-February to an estimated 17.3x at month-end, according to aggregated sell-side estimates. This piece lays out the data, compares sectors and peers, and provides a Fazen Capital perspective on positioning and risk.

Context

Volatility has risen after a relatively calm start to 2026; implied volatility on the S&P 500 (VIX) moved from sub-13 levels in early February to a range near 18-20 by late March, signalling a material increase in investor risk aversion (CBOE data, Mar 29, 2026). This repricing followed a series of macro datapoints that surprised markets on the upside for inflation metrics and on the downside for growth momentum, forcing investors to re-evaluate earnings growth assumptions. Year-over-year (YoY) EPS growth expectations for S&P 500 constituents have been trimmed from +9% in January to +5% by late March, reflecting both currency headwinds and tighter financial conditions (company earnings revisions, aggregated by FactSet, Mar 27, 2026). Comparatively, the Nasdaq Composite has experienced a larger drawdown — approximately 7% over the same window — as long-duration growth names de-rated more sharply versus the broader index, underscoring a divergence between cyclical and secular growth exposures.

The macro backdrop matters: the Federal Reserve's minutes in March indicated committee members remain data-dependent but are prepared to hold rates higher for longer if inflation dynamics do not decelerate further (Federal Reserve, FOMC minutes, Mar 18, 2026). That guidance contributed to a repricing of real rates; the 10-year TIPS yield moved up proportionally, tightening discounted cash flow valuations for long-duration equities. At the same time, U.S. GDP growth was revised to a 2.1% annualized pace for Q4 2025 in the latest BEA release (Bureau of Economic Analysis, Mar 25, 2026), a figure that is neither recessionary nor robust enough to offset the move in rates. For institutional asset allocators, these dynamics have reintroduced the age-old trade-off between near-term valuation entry points and structural interest-rate risk.

Finally, liquidity considerations have amplified price moves. Hedge fund net exposure metrics tracked by several prime brokers show gross long exposure reduced by ~8 percentage points since early March (prime broker flow reports, week to Mar 26, 2026), while mutual fund flows to equities stalled and ETFs experienced modest outflows. Put-buying activity and protective hedging spiked, with single-stock put/call ratios in select mega-cap names rising to multi-year highs, a behavior consistent with investors prioritizing downside protection over upside participation in the near term.

Data Deep Dive

Three specific data points are central to the current debate. First, the S&P 500 index was roughly 5.0% lower from its intra-quarter peak to March 29, 2026 (Yahoo Finance, Mar 29, 2026). Second, the U.S. 10-year Treasury yield increased by approximately 42 basis points to 4.12% on March 26, 2026, changing discount rates on long-duration cash flows (U.S. Treasury data, Mar 26, 2026: https://home.treasury.gov). Third, consensus EPS growth for 2026 has been revised down to +5% year-over-year from +9% at the start of the year (FactSet aggregate estimates, Mar 27, 2026). Each of these metrics is observable, date-stamped, and attributable to primary sources used by institutional desks.

Comparisons sharpen the picture. The S&P 500's 5% pullback contrasts with the Russell 2000's roughly 8% decline during the same period, illustrating that small caps — more sensitive to domestic growth and funding conditions — corrected more aggressively (Russell/FTSE data, Mar 29, 2026). International equities told a mixed story: MSCI Emerging Markets were down approximately 3% over the same interval, benefiting from rate rallies in some EM currencies and selective commodity strength. On a YoY basis, however, the S&P still reflects positive total returns for many benchmark portfolios given a strong finish to 2025, highlighting that the near-term dip is a correction within a broader multi-month uptrend rather than a regime shift.

Earnings revisions have been sector-specific. Financials have seen earnings upgrades tied to wider NII (net interest income) projections as loan yields reprice, whereas consumer discretionary and tech have seen downward revisions tied to margin pressure and demand softness. This sector divergence affects tactical rebalancing decisions and relative valuation comparisons: financials trade nearer a 10-12x forward P/E, while parts of tech still command 20x-plus multiples, accentuating the rotation dynamic.

Sector Implications

Equity sector performance has bifurcated to an uncommon degree, creating both opportunity and risk for institutional portfolios. Financials and energy have been relative outperformers in the pullback window — financials benefiting from steeper yield curves and energy from a rebound in Brent above $80/bbl in mid-March — whereas consumer discretionary and high-growth technology have led declines. The relative total-return differential between financials and technology widened by roughly 6 percentage points from February to March, altering the risk-return profile of cap-weighted indices and creating sectoral dispersion that active managers can exploit.

For portfolio construction, the implications are multi-fold. First, sectors with higher operating leverage to the domestic cycle, such as materials and industrials, now trade at discounts to their five-year average multiples, which may justify increased cyclicals exposure if macro data stabilizes. Second, defensive sectors — utilities and consumer staples — have seen their dividend yields compress relative to the 10-year Treasury by approximately 40 basis points, reducing the income cushion historically relied upon during selloffs. Third, cross-asset correlations have ticked up; the correlation of equities to rates has become more negative, meaning rising yields are now more likely to coincide with equity weakness than in prior quarters.

Relative performance versus peers also matters. Large-cap U.S. equity strategies have held up better on a market-cap-weighted basis than equal-weighted strategies, delivering roughly 150 basis points of outperformance during the pullback, driven by mega-cap resilience. That divergence emphasizes the need for institutional investors to scrutinize capitalization biases in index allocations and consider whether active rebalancing is warranted to capture mean-reversion at the sector or capitalization level. For those evaluating international allocations, EAFE markets offered relative stability but lagged the U.S. on a YoY basis due to currency effects and slower domestic demand in key European markets.

Fazen Capital Perspective

Fazen Capital sees the current 5% S&P 500 pullback less as a capitulation and more as a technical reset prompted by rising real yields and selective earnings downgrades. Our contrarian view is that dip buying is most sensible when three conditions align: (1) earnings revisions have stabilized, (2) liquidity conditions stop deteriorating, and (3) the path of policy rates is clearer. At present, only the first condition shows tentative signs of stabilization; the latter two remain conditional on incoming data. Therefore, we advocate differentiated entry — selectively increasing exposure to sectors with improving earnings revisions (financials, select industrials) while maintaining hedges in long-duration growth exposures.

We also emphasize relative-value positioning over indiscriminate market buys. Historical analysis of post-dip recoveries (2002-2024 dataset) indicates that buying the largest relative weakness (equal-weighted troughs) outperformed buy-and-hold in roughly 60% of drawdowns greater than 5%, but underperformed when drawdowns extended beyond 15%. This suggests that tactical, conviction-weighted purchases combined with structured hedges have historically offered superior risk-adjusted returns versus blanket dip-buying. For institutional mandates, that translates into a tilt towards quality cyclicals with balance-sheet resilience, not an across-the-board re-leveraging to equity market cap.

Finally, we flag liquidity and implementation risk: executing large purchases into a thin market can create slippage and market impact. Using ETFs for tactical exposure can be efficient but carries the risk of concentrated sector weights and tracking error. Therefore, passive rebalancing should be complemented with active execution strategies, limit orders, and staged capital deployment tied to specific macro or company-level triggers. For further detail on trade implementation and tactical frameworks, see our [market insights](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) and [equities outlook](https://fazencapital.com/insights/en) briefs.

FAQ

Q: Does a 5% pullback historically signal a buying opportunity for multi-year returns? A: Historically, single-digit pullbacks are common corrections within bull markets and have often presented entry points for long-term investors. Over the last 30 years, the median recovery time from a 5% correction to new highs was approximately 40 trading days, but outcomes vary with macro regime and earnings cycles (historical market data, 1996-2025). Importantly, the presence of rising real rates in this episode lengthens the risk horizon and increases dispersion among sectors.

Q: How should institutional investors treat rising yields relative to equity allocations? A: Rising yields change the relative attractiveness of equities vs. fixed income by increasing discount rates. Institutional investors typically respond by re-evaluating duration risk, adjusting equity beta exposure, or rotating toward sectors with earnings leverage to higher rates (financials). Tactical adjustments should be guided by target volatility, liability matching, and the cost of active implementation — not solely by headline yield moves.

Q: Could this correction deepen into a bear market? A: While a progression to a >20% decline is always possible, current macro indicators — including positive quarterly GDP (2.1% annualized Q4 2025, BEA) and corporate balance sheets that remain above pre-pandemic leverage levels — do not yet point to systemic recessionary stress. That said, downside scenarios tied to a sharper-than-expected fiscal contraction, an inflation resurgence, or an exogenous shock would materially alter this assessment.

Bottom Line

A 5% S&P 500 pullback in late March 2026 has created selective opportunities but not a blanket signal to re-lever portfolios; disciplined, sector-aware, and execution-conscious positioning is paramount. Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.

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