• Send Us A Tip
  • Calling all Tech Writers
  • Advertise
Monday, July 13, 2026
  • Login
TechStory
  • News
  • Crypto
  • Gadgets
  • Memes
  • Gaming
  • Cars
  • AI
  • Startups
  • Markets
  • How to
No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Crypto
  • Gadgets
  • Memes
  • Gaming
  • Cars
  • AI
  • Startups
  • Markets
  • How to
No Result
View All Result
TechStory
No Result
View All Result
Home Business

Everything you want to know about The Super Bowl Indicator

by Ayush Bansal
February 14, 2022 - Updated On February 15, 2022
in Business, Markets, News
Reading Time: 5 mins read
0
Everything you want to know about The Super Bowl Indicator
TwitterWhatsappLinkedin

First coined in 1978 by New York Times sportswriter Leonard Koppett, the Super Bowl Indicator goes like this: If an original National Football League (now the National Football Conference or NFC) team wins the Super Bowl. The stocks should rise for the rest of the year. But if the Super Bowl winner is an original American Football League (now the American Football Conference or AFC) team, stocks should fall.

Is the Super Bowl Stock Market Indicator Real? - TheStreet
Image: The Street

Briefly put, that means as long as you have more of a rooting interest in your 401(k) or IRA than you do either of Sunday’s competitors. You should be pulling for the NFC’s Los Angeles Rams over the AFC’s Cincinnati Bengals.

However, going by more recent results, investors might want to cheer for a little less Hollywood and a lot more Skyline.

What Is the Super Bowl Indicator?

The Super Bowl Indicator is a nonscientific stock market barometer. The premise of the Super Bowl Indicator is the theory that a Super Bowl win for a team from the National Football League’s American Football Conference (AFC) foretells a decline in the stock market (a bear market) in the upcoming year.

Conversely, a win for a team from the National Football Conference (NFC), as well as teams from the original National Football League (NFL)—before the merger of the NFL. The American Football League (AFL) in 1966—means that the stock market will rise in the coming year (a bull market).

The indicator suggests stocks advance for the full year when the Super Bowl winner has come from the original National Football League (now the NFC). But when an original American Football League (now the AFC) team has won, stocks decline.

Now LPL is “the first to admit that this indicator has no connection to the stock market, but ‘data don’t lie: The S&P 500 Index has performed better, and posted positive gains with greater frequency, over the past 55 Super Bowl games when NFC teams have won.”

Super Bowl Indicator

The Super Bowl Indicator originally postulated that stocks will rise for the full year if an NFC team wins the “big game,” and fall if the AFC wins. As of 1978, when Koppett introduced the supposed market signal, it had a completely accurate track record. (With a big fat asterisk in that the Pittsburgh Steelers, an AFC team, were counted as an NFC team because the franchise’s origins were in the original NFL.)

Since then, the Super Bowl Indicator hasn’t been quite as laser-precise, but generally, it has maintained its NFC-good, AFC-bad trend.

Ryan Detrick – chief market strategist for independent broker-dealer LPL Financial, and lifelong “Bungles” fan – is as biased a source as you could find on the subject. But even he admits that the “data don’t lie”: Over the past 55 Super Bowls in which the NFC team prevailed, “the S&P 500 Index has performed better, and posted positive gains with greater frequency,” Detrick says.

As of Feb. 2021, the indicator has been correct 40 out of 54 times, as measured by the S&P 500 Index. This is a success rate of 74%.6 It failed to predict a down market in both 2016 and 2017, when the Denver Broncos and New England Patriots, both original AFC teams, won Super Bowls.7 Also of note: In 2008, despite the New York Giants (NFC) winning the Super Bowl, which supposedly indicated a bull market, the stock market suffered one of the largest downturns since the Great Depression.

The Super Bowl Indicator is an example of purely fun sports writing. There is no real connection between a football team in a particular league and the U.S. stock market; so, any relationship that can be drawn between the two is purely a coincidence. What began as an interesting column many decades ago continues to make a new headline at least once a year.

Who’s playing in Super Bowl LVI?

The Los Angeles Rams and Cincinnati Bengals are playing in Super Bowl LVI.

Where is the Super Bowl being played this year?

The Rams are actually the “away” team in this year’s big game and will be wearing white jerseys despite playing in their home stadium in Los Angeles. In fact, the Super Bowl host will be playing in the game for the second straight season.

The Tampa Bay Bucs made history last year becoming the first team ever to host a Super Bowl and play in it.

Tweets about Super Bowl

As one person on Twitter noted, a “superstition is only stupid if it doesn’t work.”

You might also like

Netflix, Sony and Paramount Are Chasing a $250 Million Deal to Own Letterboxd

OpenAI and Google Are Selling AI to Pentagon-Blacklisted Chinese Firms And It Is Entirely Legal

Meta’s Own AI Image Detector Misses More Than Half Its Cropped Photos In Reuters Test, Exposing Deepfake Detection Gap

A superstition is only stupid if it doesn’t work #TakeTheCrown

— Connor English (@CEng1ish) October 28, 2015

 

#SuperBowl from a traders perspective.: The #Rams are much stronger in the trenches which is akin to market structure. But the #Bengals have Joe Burrow, which is like the brand new shiny indicator with tons of promise

— Trader’s Landing (@TradersLanding) February 13, 2022

?Leonard #SuperBowl indicator
1967 – 2021

Winner from #NFC , #stonks UP
Stock mkt up 80% of time ( Avg. Return +10.8% )

Winner from #AFC , #stockmarkets DOWN
Stock mkt up 65% of time ( Avg. Return +7.1% )

First 27 SB were pin accurate (1967-1994)

Credit : @andreijikh pic.twitter.com/szvsP37l1S

— High Stakes (@KshitizBisht) February 13, 2022

Tags: #SuperBowlMarketNews
Tweet57SendShare16
Previous Post

Sony Walkman Signature Series with advanced audio tech for Rs. 3.15 Lakhs

Next Post

CBI books ABG Shipyard for India’s biggest bank fraud case

Ayush Bansal

Recommended For You

Netflix, Sony and Paramount Are Chasing a $250 Million Deal to Own Letterboxd

by Rounak Majumdar
July 12, 2026
0
Netflix, Sony and Paramount Are Chasing a $250 Million Deal to Own Letterboxd

Letterboxd, the New Zealand-based social platform where over 30 million film fans log, rate, and review movies, has formally kicked off a sale process and the names circling...

Read more

OpenAI and Google Are Selling AI to Pentagon-Blacklisted Chinese Firms And It Is Entirely Legal

by Rounak Majumdar
July 12, 2026
0
OpenAI and Google Are Selling AI to Pentagon-Blacklisted Chinese Firms And It Is Entirely Legal

OpenAI and Google have confirmed that they are providing advanced artificial intelligence services to Singapore-registered subsidiaries of Alibaba, Baidu, and Tencent, three Chinese technology companies on the US...

Read more

Meta’s Own AI Image Detector Misses More Than Half Its Cropped Photos In Reuters Test, Exposing Deepfake Detection Gap

by Rounak Majumdar
July 12, 2026
0
Meta's Own AI Image Detector Misses More Than Half Its Cropped Photos In Reuters Test, Exposing Deepfake Detection Gap

A tool designed to detect AI-generated images has failed a basic real-world test and the images it missed were ones it created itself. A Reuters analysis published on...

Read more
Next Post
ABG Shipyard

CBI books ABG Shipyard for India's biggest bank fraud case

Please login to join discussion

Techstory

Tech and Business News from around the world. Follow along for latest in the world of Tech, AI, Crypto, EVs, Business Personalities and more.
reach us at info@techstory.in

Advertise With Us

Reach out at - info@techstory.in

Aviator Game India 2026

BROWSE BY TAG

#Crypto #howto 2024 acquisition AI amazon Apple Artificial Intelligence bitcoin Business China cryptocurrency e-commerce electric vehicles Elon Musk Ethereum facebook funding Gaming Google India Instagram Investment ios iPhone IPO Market Markets Meta Microsoft News OpenAI samsung Social Media SpaceX startup startups tech technology Tesla TikTok trend trending twitter US

© 2025 Techstory.in

No Result
View All Result
  • News
  • Crypto
  • Gadgets
  • Memes
  • Gaming
  • Cars
  • AI
  • Startups
  • Markets
  • How to

© 2025 Techstory.in

Welcome Back!

Login to your account below

Forgotten Password?

Retrieve your password

Please enter your username or email address to reset your password.

Log In
Are you sure want to unlock this post?
Unlock left : 0
Are you sure want to cancel subscription?