«
Bull markets do not die of old age; they die of cause,» Ryan said, citing data from the San Francisco branch of the Federal Reserve that shows the likelihood of recession does not to rise significantly as periods of expansion grow older.
Fortunately, bull markets don't die of old age.
Bull markets don't generally end until everyone is on board.
Bull markets do not last as long as this one has.
No, from the standpoint that bull markets don't die of old age anyway so their length doesn't tell us anything directly about their future prospects.
Bull markets do not last forever.
And although I read recently that bull markets don't die of old age or collapse of their own weight, I think sometimes they do (a dollar for anyone who can identify the catalyst for the collapse of the bull market and tech bubble in 2000 — it's not easy).
Early in the strongest bull markets you don't have to do much, you are just holding winners and being happy.
Bull markets don't only cause stock crashes.
Juicy Excerpt:
Bull markets do not generate wealth.
Juicy Excerpt: Policymakers should educate voters about the damage that
bull markets do to our political institutions.
The current bull market is the second longest in history and as
all bull markets do, they eventually end in a recession.
Bull markets don't top on insanely overbought momentum.
Secular bull markets don't begin at valuations associated with 3.8 % annual returns for a decade — secular bears do.
Secular
bull markets do not begin because the calendar says they are due.
Bull markets do not «die of old age».
But even the healthiest of
bull markets do not go straight up without significant corrections along the way.
Some would argue, myself included, that bull markets don't start at the depths of a bear, but whatever, let's just go with it for the purposes of moving past a dead and beaten horse.
And we all know bull markets don't go on forever.
It's important to keep in mind the old investing adage, «Bull markets don't die of old age.»
No doubt you've heard before that bull markets don't die of old age.
But, bull markets don't last forever.
«The old adage is: «Bull markets don't die of old age, they are killed by higher interest rates.»
If you are new to stock trading, you must know that
bull markets do not trend in a straight line (the same is true of bear markets).
Granted, the prospects for a resumption of a roaring bull market don't look compelling at this juncture.
However, the age of
this bull market does suggest risks are rising, and that to expect it to last much longer without a cyclical downturn would be stretching historical probability.
Our current
bull market does not look so great compared to others.
But the bull market didn't top there.
Just remember that even if
this bull market does have significant upside left in it, that doesn't mean we won't have some gut - churning corrections between now and its eventual end.
Bear markets,
Bull markets it did not matter.
PS — one difference with the Bloomberg article linked to in the first paragraph, the longest
bull market did not begin in 1990 but in 1987.
While passive management or indexing might work in
bull markets it does not work well in flat or bear markets.
It means that this economic expansion and bull market don't have a lot of years left.
Not exact matches
Charles Schwab's Liz Ann Sonders explains why she expects the
bull market to continue and what the Federal Reserve will
do about it.
«If you line up the previous El Niño outlier of 1998 with this March 2016 El Niño (as we might
do in lining up
bull market highs) it gives an idea of when 2 degrees Celsius might first be broached in a future El Niño effect: just 17 years!»
What to me is remarkable is that all we've
done, almost in this entire
bull market, is bounce back and forth between panic and relief.
There's probably no Wall Street adage that's been repeated more during this six - year
bull market than «don't fight the Fed.»
Leuthold Group's Doug Ramsey says the
bull market is getting older, but that doesn't mean it doesn't have room to run.
The threat of nuclear war with North Korea didn't kill the stock
market's
bull run.
«If we enter a
bull market, these stocks will go from five times earnings to about 10 times earnings, and they haven't
done anything yet,» he says.
«This
does need to go back down (maybe not go quite as low as it was in February) to say the
bulls are back, we're oversold enough to get that good rally in the
market.»
Still, despite a flight to shiny metals, a bear
market in stocks
does not make a
bull market in gold, he said.
It didn't work, as Chinese equity
markets continued their descent on Monday, fueling worry because it is unclear how much of the country's
bull market was funded by individuals borrowing to buy stocks.
Archard doesn't think we're in a
bull run, but he
does say that at this point the
market is «a pretty fast cow.»
Despite a flight to shiny metals, a bear
market in stocks
does not make a
bull market in gold, said a widely - followed
market timer.
Historically,
bull markets lasting at least 4 years (since 1897) have only ended with a recession — that is, they typically
do not end just because «everyone is too bullish.»
Although the bullish bias of the past two months has presented some great opportunities for momentum swing traders, no
bull market moves straight up without eventually undergoing substantial corrections along the way (just as bear
markets don't fall straight down for too long without large, counter-trend bounces).
Don't make the mistake of thinking you're a great investor just because you're picking stocks during a
bull market.
This is why we don't date the start of
bull markets until those new highs get reached.
I agree with it, for the most part, but as someone who reads a lot of investing articles, the general consensus among the «experts» seems to be that while we are OK now, within the next couple of years the
bull market will end [as they always
do at some point], and we will suffer a large crash.