
The financial community is abuzz with discussions about the current bull market, which is now 28 months old and has seen a gain of 71.3%. Analysts highlight that historically, bull markets tend to last longer than expected, with the average duration of the last five bull markets reaching approximately eight years. The S&P 500 has rebounded significantly since its pandemic peak on February 19, 2020, climbing 81% despite a subsequent bear market in 2022. Market experts note that both the strength and length of the current Nasdaq bull market are above the median, which has recorded a gain of 67.1% over 498 days. The ongoing bullish sentiment suggests that investors may continue to see positive returns, with some analysts asserting that the bull market has not yet reached its peak.
We started sharing this chart last year and it showed that bull markets that made it into their third year (like this one) tended to last much longer than you'd ever expect. Going back 50 years, the 5 bulls that made it this far lasted an avg of 8 years. https://t.co/WqHPEEPlE5
Crazy stat, but the S&P 500 is up 81.0% since right before the COVID bear market started. That comes up to an annualized return of 12.6% over the past four years! A 100-year pandemic and a vicious 25% bear market in 2022, yet investors were rewarded at a 12.6% clip. Wow.
With new highs yesterday, this bull market is officially up 71.3%. But looking at the last five bull markets going back 50 years shows that they all at least doubled, with some doing much better. 🐂💪 https://t.co/qG3SoBZJSd










