Jungibaaz
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Question: Of those who have lost a lot in stocks lately... are they going to recover their losses fully once the economy bounces back fully, say, in March 2021 or that because they lost the time of one year they will still lose over their stock's (and their) lifetime over-all $$?
I'll break down this answer in to two parts. A) directly address your question, and B) to elaborate around the subject, and add to what @Nilgiri has already rightly said.
A) They will recover, eventually. When the market takes a hit and stock values go down, you lose money the same way you lose it on any asset. E.g. you had x number of stock in multiple companies worth USD 1m, market takes a hit you might be left with stock worth USD 0.8m, but you still own x number of stock in those various companies unless you decide to sell. Same way when an economic downturn happens, you can own an asset such as a house or a plot of land, it can decrease in value in a bad year, but generally over the course of time it should increase in value if the conditions are right.
B) Now on an aside, the real reason why stocks are looked at so keenly, besides all the rich and their money, is that stocks reflect the health of the companies listed on the exchanges. Therefore they're a reflection (albeit a loose reflection) of what's going on in an economy. And stocks and financial securities are usually first to react to any new development. So for example, when coronavirus hits, or a new development occurs in the story, stocks react immediately, bond values react immediately and so do exchange rates. In the same way, if a major natural disaster might happen, stocks react immediately. Only later and with varying delay will GDP growth and house prices etc react. And the last reason is that generally speaking, stocks and markets are usually the catalysts for major downturns, banks are systemically important institutions that need to keep functioning. And they have on their balance sheets assets including stock and bond holdings, as well as other priced and traded securities etc. When markets seize and values go down, banks will have a lot of trouble finding liquidity (simplified explanation of liquidity; short term cash that banks need to keep operations and ATMs running), and if the value of it's assets goes down so much that their value is less than that of their liabilities, a bank is basically insolvent. So when major crises have happened in the past (2007-8, 1933 etc.), usually stocks and financial securities go down first, then we see liquidity issues in the markets, then usually some banks will face trouble and some might go down, after that the economy shows the damage but with a delay. That means that sometimes, some crises that start with stock market crash, will eventually lead to widespread economic damage, unemployment etc.
On a last note, stocks of course go up and down all the time. So what's different this time with Covid-19?
Well, for one we can all see that this latest crash has been seen in every market and it has been record-breakingly massive. The other thing is, and this is what you learn talking to bankers and traders, we're also seeing huge liquidity issues. It's one thing for stocks to lose a bit of value, another thing for all liquidity to dry up, the latter is what's seen in a major financial crisis.