It's official: new bear market
by
genedio
07/01/2008, 10:08 AM #
The Dow is now officially in a bear market, defined as a greater than 20% drop from the last high point. This is the third bear market of Bush's two terms in office.
The first bear market was from May, 2001 (11,350) to September, 2001 (8,062), a decline of 29%. The second was from March, 2002 (10,673) to October, 2002 (7,197). a decline of 33%. The most recent bear market started last October (14,165) to around 11,300 today.
By comparison, Clinton had a very short bear market in 1998 associated with the Long Term Capital Management implosion. But the Dow quickly recovered; the Dow was higher in November than it had been in July. The first two Bush bear markets were almost continuous, and the bear didn't end until March, 2003--almost two years after it began. The Clinton 'bear' had a decline of 20.4%, barely qualifying as a bear market.
Bush's father also had one bear market in the Dow. From July, 1990 (3,010) to October (2,354), a decline of 22%.
Reagan had two bear markets: the first lasting from June, 1981 (1.023) to August, 1982 (770), a decline of 25%, and associated with the deepest recession since the Great Depression. The second bear market was of course the 1987 crash: the month of October, 1987 alone witnessed a 40% decline from top to bottom. Unlike the 1998 correction in the Clinton administration, this bear market was protracted (the Dow didn't recover its October, 1987 high until July, 1989 in the first Bush administration).
The Dow under Jimmy Carter ended about where it started, but along the way suffered one bear market from the beginning of his term (954) to March, 1978 (770), a decline of about 20%.
Nixon suffered two bear markets, the first from May, 1969 (937) to May, 1970 (700), a decline of 25%. The second was the worst post Depression bear; it lasted from January, 1973 (1,000 to October, 1974 (665), witnessed a decline of nearly 35%, and lasted nearly two years. The only thing comparable is the 2001-3 Bush bear market.
All figures before Bush I are monthly averages, as my source (MSN Money) doesn't give monthly highs and lows before 1988.
Somehow, Republicans have been rewarded with the reputation for being good for business, but the truth of the matter is that no one compares with Nixon and Bush for once-in-a-generation portfolio busting bear markets. Now it looks like Bush is outdoing Nixon, and we'll have his two terms of office bracketed by bear markets. And Bill Clinton had the best bull market since Roosevelt's first term.