Booms and busts are a normal part of the stock market cycle. While investors are happy to welcome the upswings, the downturns can be a source of emotional turmoil and may even shake their confidence in the markets.
Here are a few facts that may help to make these cycles more comprehensible and keep them in perspective.
Three key concepts
Let’s start with some basic definitions.
A bull market is a period in which a market index climbs at least 20% above its previous low. This 20% benchmark is symbolic: the index may be rising for many months or years before officially entering bull market territory. Some analysts prefer to define this phase as a period of growth to a new high after a decline of at least 20%.
A bear market is the opposite: a period in which an index drops by at least 20% compared to its previous peak. This benchmark is also symbolic, and the index may be declining steadily long before it officially becomes a bear market.
A third, equally important, concept is that of a stock market correction. This refers to a somewhat smaller decline in the stock market, usually at least 10%. If the correction eventually reaches 20%, it becomes a bear market.
Advantage: bull markets
How often do bull and bear markets occur? Between 1957 and 2022, the Canadian stock market experienced 10 bull markets and 10 bear markets…