Now that the Dow Jones Industrial Average has made headlines by crossing the 40,000 level for the first time ever on Thursday, what comes next? History shows the 128-year-old-average tends to pull back a bit after crossing large, round-number thresholds. The Dow’s ascent to the largely ceremonial level has been underpinned by themes aiding the broader market in recent months: continued enthusiasm for artificial intelligence boosting corporate profits, optimism that inflation will continue to come down and brightening the outlook for lower interest rates รขยย eventually. CFRA Research looked at all the round-number thresholds from 39,000 back to 1,000 in 1972, and found the index tended to rise a bit more after surpassing a 1,000-point milestone before eventually pulling back over the ensuing 25 days. The declines averaged about 6%. “Large, round numbers have typically been a cause for concern for investors, implying important levels of resistance,” CFRA’s chief investment strategist Sam Stovall wrote in an April report anticipating the Dow at 40,000. “History tends to confirm that the market typically takes a breather after eclipsing millennium milestones.” However, Stovall also noted that 64% of these declines going back to 1972 can be characterized as “noise” because the retreats were less than 5%. A “pullback” has occurred 26% of the time, equating to a decline between 5% and 9.99%, the data shows. Full-blown corrections, or declines of 10% to 19.99%, have occurred just 5% of the time. Bear market declines of 20% or more also happened just 5% of the time. .DJI 1Y mountain The 30-stock Dow crossed the 40,000 level on Thursday after flirting with the threshold in April. Strong earnings from economic bellwether Walmart briefly helped push the Dow above the 40,000 mark on Thursday before the average closed at 39,8907.88. The Dow has added nearly 5.8% in 2024 as of Thursday’s close, trailing gains of more than 11% in both the S & P 500 and Nasdaq Composite. Bottom line according to the data: The Dow could rise a bit further before a minor pullback to start the summer.