How Low Can CHTR Really Go In A Market Crash?
To accurately assess risk, investors must look at how an asset behaves when the system breaks. In the 13 major market dislocations since it began trading, Charter Communications (CHTR) has averaged a -17% contraction, compared to the S&P 500’s -14% drop.
If you are an investor in CHTR stock, you might be asking: if the macroeconomic environment fractures, how far can this stock actually fall?
One of the ways to understand this is to simply see how the stock has performed during past market crashes.

How Does It Handle Growth & Demand Scare?
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2020 COVID-19 Crash (Feb 2020 to Apr 2020)
- A novel coronavirus triggered pandemic fears. Italy’s healthcare collapse and a March 2020 Saudi-Russia oil price war signaled uncontainable disruption.
- Governments shut economies, triggering the fastest bear market in history. Unlimited QE and $2.2T fiscal stimulus drove a V-shaped recovery following vaccine development.
CHTR stock experienced a -31% drawdown during this event, compared to -34% for the S&P and -0.7% for bonds.
What Happens During Credit & Liquidity Crises?
2023 SVB Regional Banking Crisis (Feb 2023 to Jul 2023)
- SVB’s long-duration The treasury portfolio was destroyed by rising rates. A March 8, 2023, loss disclosure triggered an instantaneous bank run accelerated by social media.
- The FDIC seized SVB, Signature, and First Republic. Contagion was contained through deposit backstops and the Fed’s Bank Term Funding Program emergency liquidity.
CHTR stock saw a -20% drawdown vs. -6.7% for the S&P and -4.3% for bonds.
How It Fares During Rate & Valuation Shock?
2022 Inflation Shock & Fed Tightening (Jan 2022 to Oct 2022)
- CPI hit 9.1%, forcing aggressive tightening since Volcker. Russia’s invasion of Ukraine further spiked global energy and food prices.
- Stocks and bonds fell simultaneously, eliminating the 60/40 hedge. Rising rates crushed long-duration assets until CPI declined in October 2022.
The drawdown for CHTR stood at -53% compared to -24% for the S&P and -35% for bonds.
Past Market Shock Drawdowns Summarized For CHTR
| Shock Event | S&P | Bonds | Sector | Stock |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2010 Eurozone Sovereign Debt Crisis / Flash Crash | -15% | None | Did Not Trade | -7.5% |
| 2011 US Debt Ceiling Crisis & European Contagion | -18% | -1.1% | Did Not Trade | -30% |
| 2013 Taper Tantrum | -0.2% | -17% | Did Not Trade | None |
| 2014-2016 Oil Price Collapse | -6.8% | -5.0% | Did Not Trade | -11% |
| 2015-2016 China Devaluation / Global Growth Scare | -12% | -4.4% | Did Not Trade | -15% |
| 2016-2017 Trump Reflation Bond Selloff | -3.7% | -15% | Did Not Trade | -12% |
| Q4 2018 Fed Policy Error / Growth Scare | -19% | -2.2% | -20% | -16% |
| 2020 COVID-19 Crash | -34% | -0.7% | -30% | -31% |
| 2022 Inflation Shock & Fed Tightening | -24% | -35% | -39% | -53% |
| 2023 SVB Regional Banking Crisis | -6.7% | -4.3% | -6.2% | -20% |
| Summer-Fall 2023 Five Percent Yield Shock | -9.5% | -17% | -4.0% | -9.2% |
| 2024 Yen Carry Trade Unwind | -7.8% | -1.2% | -6.4% | None |
| 2025 US Tariff Shock | -19% | -3.8% | -18% | -11% |
[1] 2010 Eurozone Sovereign Debt Crisis / Flash Crash: Greece’s deficit revelation collapsed European banks and triggered the May Flash Crash.
[2] 2011 US Debt Ceiling Crisis & European Contagion: US credit downgrade and European sovereign stress triggered a broad risk-off selloff.
[3] 2013 Taper Tantrum: Bernanke’s taper hint spiked Treasury yields, triggering emerging market capital flight.
[4] 2014-2016 Oil Price Collapse: OPEC refused to cut output, crashing crude from $100 to $26.
[5] 2015-2016 China Devaluation / Global Growth Scare: Yuan devaluation sparked global recession fears, crushing cyclicals and emerging markets.
[6] 2016-2017 Trump Reflation Bond Selloff: Trump’s election spurred fiscal stimulus hopes, rotating capital from bonds into cyclicals.
[7] Q4 2018 Fed Policy Error / Growth Scare: Powell’s hawkish comments and trade war fears triggered the worst December since 1931.
[8] 2020 COVID-19 Crash: Pandemic lockdowns caused history’s fastest bear market before massive stimulus drove recovery.
[9] 2022 Inflation Shock & Fed Tightening: 9.1% CPI forced aggressive rate hikes, crushing both stocks and bonds simultaneously.
[10] 2023 SVB Regional Banking Crisis: SVB’s rate-driven bond losses triggered a social media bank run, seized by FDIC.
[11] Summer-Fall 2023 Five Percent Yield Shock: Strong economic data pushed 10-year yields to 5%, compressing yield-sensitive sector valuations.
[12] 2024 Yen Carry Trade Unwind: BOJ rate hike unwound yen carry trades, briefly crashing tech stocks globally.
[13] 2025 US Tariff Shock: 145% China tariffs crashed equities and the dollar on supply chain disruption fears.
So What Can You Do For Your Investments?
While the headline panic over macroeconomic shocks can be deafening, letting fear dictate your trades leaves your portfolio highly exposed. Drawdowns of this magnitude are embedded in CHTR’s historical profile. If the thesis for owning the business remains intact, a steep contraction during a Growth & Demand Scare environment should be viewed as the baseline expectation, not a fundamental failure.
This is where a rule-based portfolio investment approach, such as Trefis High Quality Portfolio (HQ) makes a difference. It allows you to stay invested when markets are fearful and volatile by dampening the risk. HQ has returned > 105% since inception.