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Amid heightened recession fears, major Wall Street firms now warn that the ongoing market selloff, which is on track for seven consecutive weeks of losses, could get much worse—with stocks set to plunge by another 20% or so if the economy heads towards a looming recession.

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Recession fears have spiked this week, after major retailers warned about inflationary pressures eating into quarterly profits and the Federal Reserve pledged that it “won’t hesitate” to keep raising interest rates until surging prices come back down.

The S&P 500 could plunge to 3,000 if the economy falls into a recession in the near future, which would amount to a roughly 24% drop from the index’s current level of around 3,900, according to a recent note from Deutsche Bank’s chief US equity and global strategist, Binky Chadha.

While he has a 4,750 price target for the S&P 500 (over 20% higher than current levels) and predicts a “relief rally” by year-end, there are risks that a “protracted selloff” could slide into a “self-fulfilling recession ,” Chadha said.

Market losses could intensify if the economy falls into a recession, notes Goldman Sachs chief US equity strategist David Kostin, who puts the odds of a downturn within the next two years at 35%.

He points to historical data showing that across 12 recessions since World War II, the S&P 500 has fallen by a median 24% and average 30%: Based on that pattern, the stock market could fall by another 11% to 18% from current levels , Kostin predicted in a recent note.

Strategists at Bank of America, meanwhile, warned of a stagflation scenario—slowing economic growth and high prices—that could create a “worst case” scenario for stocks where the S&P 500 falls to 3,200, a roughly 18% drop from current levels.