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Bear Market Definition
Official trigger: Index down 20% from peak
Example: S&P 500 at 4,800 (peak) → falls to 3,840 (down 20%) = bear market
Once the index falls 20%, it's officially a bear market. Some indexes are in bear markets while others aren't (small-cap stocks might be down 30% while large-caps are down 15%).
Bear Market Triggers
Economic recession: Weak growth, rising unemployment
Federal Reserve tightening: Raising rates to fight inflation
Financial crisis: Bank failures, credit market disruption Valuation reset: Stock prices were too high; they fall to reasonable levels
Geopolitical shock: War, political instability
Historical Bear Markets
2008 financial crisis:
- Decline: -57%
- Duration: 17 months
- Recovery: 4+ years
2000-2002 dot-com crash:
- Decline: -49% (S&P 500)
- Duration: 30 months
- Recovery: 5 years
1973-1974 energy crisis:
- Decline: -48%
- Duration: 21 months
- Recovery: 7 years
2022 inflation/rate hikes:
- Decline: -19.6% (just below bear market)
- Duration: 9 months
- Recovery: 1 year
2020 COVID:
- Decline: -34% (fastest to bear market)
- Duration: 1 month
- Recovery: 5 months (fastest recovery)
Duration and Frequency
Since 1950, the S&P 500 experiences a bear market (20%+ decline) roughly every 3-5 years on average.
Average bear market: 14-16 months
Worst bear markets (decline >30%): Roughly every 10-15 years
Catastrophic bear markets (decline >50%): Roughly every 30-50 years
Psychology of Bear Markets
Bear markets are psychologically brutal even when they're moderate:
Narrative: "This is different; the market will never recover"
Reality: The market always recovers (eventually)
But it doesn't feel that way during the bear market. Media coverage is relentlessly negative. Pessimism is everywhere. Selling begets more selling (negative feedback loop).
Bear Markets and Recoveries
Crucial insight: The stock market has recovered from every bear market and gone on to new all-time highs.
1987 crash: S&P 500 down 34% in one month. By 1989, new all-time high.
2000-2002: Down 49%. By 2007, new all-time high.
2008: Down 57%. By 2013, new all-time high.
2020: Down 34%. By 2021, new all-time high.
Patterns: Recoveries take 2-5 years (except 2020's unprecedented 5-month recovery).
Key Statistics
Average bear market decline: -35% Median duration: 14 months Average time to recovery: 3-4 years Frequency: About every 3-5 years
Opportunity in Bear Markets
Bear markets create buying opportunities:
Example: Investor with $100,000
Bull market (2017-2021):
- Portfolio grows to $170,000
- But no buying opportunities
Bear market (2022):
- Indexes down 20%
- New money (salary, bonus) buys at 20% discount
- $10,000 invested buys shares worth future $12,500 (20% discount to full recovery)
The math:
- Investors who panic sold in 2008 at -57% and missed recovery: Lost 57% and missed 300%+ subsequent gains
- Investors who held and bought in 2008: Captured 300%+ gains from 2009-2021
Difference: Hundreds of thousands of dollars.
Bear Market Mistakes
1. Panic selling: Selling at the bottom is the worst possible timing
2. Missing the recovery: Staying out of the market after exiting misses the biggest gains (usually come first few months of recovery)
3. Market timing: Trying to sell before bears and buy at the bottom is nearly impossible
4. Abandoning strategy: Changing allocation during bear markets locks in losses
How to Navigate Bear Markets
1. Maintain allocation: Don't panic and sell. Stay invested.
2. Dollar-cost average: Continue regular contributions. Buy more at lower prices.
3. Rebalance: Sell bonds (up) and buy stocks (down). This mechanically forces buying low.
4. Focus on long-term: Bear markets are temporary. If your horizon is 20+ years, declines are irrelevant.
5. Ignore headlines: Media is most negative during bear markets (when pessimism is highest). Ignore the noise.
Bear Market Definitions (Beyond 20%)
Correction: Down 10-20% Bear market: Down 20%+ Crash: Rapid sharp decline (often single day or week) Secular bear: Long bear market lasting years (2000-2012 is considered a secular bear with two major bear cycles)
The Bottom Line
Bear markets are inevitable and recurring. They feel catastrophic but historically last 12-18 months. The stock market has recovered from every bear market on record and gone on to new highs.
The best investment strategy during bear markets: maintain your allocation, continue investing, and remember that declines are buying opportunities for long-term investors.





