Probably Everything You Need To Know About Bear Markets
BY MICHAEL BATNICK
Source: The Irrelevant Investor
https://theirrelevantinvestor.wordpress ... r-markets/
Since 1950, the Standard & Poor’s 500 Index has experienced a decline of 10 percent or more once every two years on average.
Since 1928, we have seen at least 23 selloffs of 20 percent or more, which is the official definition of a bear market.
Those 23 bear markets over a span of 85 years work out to one about every 3 ½ years or so.
“Wall Street indexes predicted nine out of the last five recessions”
There have been 16 corrections since World War II that didn’t lead to a recession. On average, markets fell 19.4 percent during those episodes
A drop of more than 20% should be expected, and most recessions have seen the S&P 500 fall at least that much.
Including the 19.9% drop around the 1990-91 recession, it's happened in 10 of the last 14.
The last recession was far more painful for investors, with its 57% plunge.
Size matters. The smaller the company, the more its stock tends to fall during a recession. The Russell 2000 index of small-cap stocks has done worse than the S&P 500 index of large-cap stocks in each of the last five recessions.
A similar scenario is playing out now. The Russell 2000 has lost about 25% since peaking in June, double the S&P 500's drop.
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