Investors often confuse stock market corrections with crashes. Understanding the difference clarifies how market declines differ in cause, impact and recovery.
A stock market correction is a decline of 10%–20% from recent highs. It’s usually short-term and often seen as healthy. Corrections help cool overheated markets.
India examples:
Nifty corrected in 2018 due to global cues.
2022 saw a correction amid inflation fears.
A stock market crash is a sudden, sharp drop of over 20%. It happens quickly and causes panic.
Historical crashes:
1929 Great Depression
2008 Financial Crisis
2020 Covid-19 crash
Read More: History of Stock Market Crashes in India
| Feature | Correction | Crash |
|---|---|---|
Magnitude |
10%–20% |
20%+ |
Speed |
Gradual |
Sudden |
Duration |
Weeks–months |
Days–weeks |
Cause |
Economic shifts |
Panic, crises |
Impact |
Mild |
Severe |
Recovery |
Quick |
Slow, uncertain |
Key insights:
Corrections are common.
Crashes are rare but damaging.
Both need calm, informed responses.
Corrections unfold over weeks or months. Prices decline steadily, not suddenly.
Unlike crashes, there’s no panic selling.
Example: Nifty’s 2022 correction was gradual, driven by global inflation and rate hikes.
Crashes often produce sudden, large declines and elevated intraday volatility.
Market-wide circuit-breakers or temporary halts may be triggered.
Historical responses have included portfolio rebalancing, liquidity pressures and varied recovery timelines
Crashes test patience but often lead to recovery.
Corrections and crashes differ in magnitude, speed and typical causes. Corrections commonly reflect market re-pricing in the 10%–20% range; crashes are larger, faster declines. Understanding past episodes and recovery patterns helps contextualise future market moves.
This content is for informational purposes only and the same should not be construed as investment advice. Bajaj Finserv Direct Limited shall not be liable or responsible for any investment decision that you may take based on this content.
A correction typically denotes a decline of 10%–20% from recent highs.
Crashes often follow panic, systemic shocks or severe economic events.
Corrections occur relatively often; crashes are historically less frequent.
Crashes generally take longer to stabilise and recover, though outcomes vary widely.
Yes, it helps reset valuations and reduce speculation.
Market participants may reassess positions, review time horizons, and examine valuation changes; responses vary by investor objectives.
Observed responses include seeking liquidity, stress-testing portfolios and reassessing exposures; outcomes differ by asset and timeframe.
Yes—examples include the global stress in 2008 and the rapid sell-off in March 2020.