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100 years of Market Cycles

Market Analysis


2000-2002 Bear Market

The 2000-2002 bear market started in March 2000 and lasted for two and a halve years with the S&P 500 losing around 50%. The bear market ended in October 2002.

Charts from stockcharts.com are used to analyze all of the market cycles that have occurred over the last ninety years. Analyzing the market cycles with charts gives stock investors a visual representation of how the stock market moves over time.

The S&P 500 index is the industry benchmark and is used to analyze the 2000-2002 bear market and all market cycles from 1957.

The S&P 500 index was introduced to the stock market in 1957 and the index included back tested data to 1925 based on the historical prices of the stocks that made up the index. This provided historical data for comparison with the Dow Industrial Average.

90 Year Market Chart

The following chart shows the bear market on a 90-year chart with the S&P 500 index plotted as a bar chart with quarterly bars.

Chart 90yr: 2000-2002 Bear Market

The 2000-2002 bear market on a 90-year chart for the S&P 500 index plotted as a bar chart with quarterly bars.

As can be readily observed from the long-term 90-year market chart, the 2000-2002 bear market is just one of many bear markets that have occurred.

The 90-year market chart also shows an 80-quarters (20-year) simple moving average which has spent most of the last ninety years trending upwards. This shows that over the long-term the market has broadly continued higher as the moving average followed the S&P 500 index higher.

20-year Market Chart

The following chart shows the 2000-2002 bear market on a 20-year chart with the S&P 500 index plotted as a monthly bar chart.

Chart 20yr: 2000-2002 Bear Market

The 2000-2002 bear market on a 20-year chart for the S&P 500 index plotted as a monthly bar chart.

A 12-month simple moving average is also plotted on the 20-year market chart. The 12-month moving average is a useful indicator used in Technical Analysis for highlighting market cycles.

As the 20-year market chart shows, the 12-month moving average followed the 2000-2002 bear market lower. The collapsing of the 1990s Technology bubble started the bear market and the 2001 recession continued driving the bear market after the massive 1988-1999 bull market.

Most investors new to the stock market are under the impression that the stock market only moves in the direction of the current market cycle.

In reality, the stock market moves in cycles and alternates between bull markets (where stock prices broadly increase) and bear markets (where stock prices broadly decline).

Fortunately for investors, bull markets are usually longer than bear markets. This means that stock prices spend more time increasing in value than they do losing value.

Bull markets last anywhere from two years to around a decade, whereas bear markets are shorter and usually last a year or two and sometimes three.

4-year Market Chart

The 2000-2002 bear market is shown again with a shorter time-frame on a 4-year chart plotted as a weekly bar chart.

Chart 4yr: 2000-2002 Bear Market

The 2000-2002 bear market on a 4-year chart for the S&P 500 index plotted as a weekly bar chart.

The shorter time-frame provides more detail. As the chart shows, the 2000-2002 bear market lost 50% over a two and a halve year period. The bear market started in March 2000 and ended in October 2002.

Market Chart: Rallies and Pullbacks

The 2000-2002 bear market is shown again with a 4-year line chart and two moving average indicators.

Chart MA: 2000-2002 Bear Market

The 2000-2002 bear market on a 3-year chart for the S&P 500 index plotted with a line chart and two moving average indicators.

The above line chart for the S&P 500 index shows a 52-week (long-term) and a 12-week (short-term) simple moving average.

The 52-week moving average (purple line) followed the bear market lower.

The 12-week moving average (orange line) broadly identifies the rallies and pullbacks that occurred.

The 2000-2002 bear market sold down in three stages.

The first down leg saw the S&P 500 index drop from March 2000 (noted on the chart with the first RH - Relative High) until April 2001 (the first RL - Relative Low).

The market then briefly rallies until May 2001 (2nd RH). From here the market sells off with the second down leg which bottoms in September 2001 (2nd RL).

Another bear rally sees the market run up till January 2002 before selling off again to reach the bottom in October 2002.

The bear market was now over and the S&P 500 index then starts rallying with the 2003-2007 bull market.