Well, it's kind of a linear thing. I mean if a $100 stock drops to $95 (a 5% loss obviously), one only needs to gain 5.62% to break even. $90---> a 10% drop---> you need 11.1% to break even. That's why most normal stocks can channel or trend in one direction or the other.
I can't think of too many stocks that channel in a 50%/100% range. Maybe some of those crazy Chinese stocks that appear out of nowhere for a few days that go from $10 to $200 and then to $3... but as a whole, not too many on the SPX.
And sure there'll be news events that may cause an oversold condition, but that breaks the channel, and if the news is nothing, the stock will return to the channel once the dust settles.
There will always be exceptions... but for every NVDA and META.... you can find a SNAP and TWLO.
Yes but my point is that even though a stock drops from 100 to 95 (5%) and it takes 5.62% to return to 100 does not mean that the stock is at some mathematical disadvantaged to return to 100. The stock will go down $5 and $5 with the same sentiment.