1973 A double bottom and then a rally making up the entire plunge.
Two plunges from the late 30's, two rally's ensure - eventually making up more than half of the plunge.
And now a look at our current market.
It's difficult to make an absolute conclusion, but after a plunge the bias is clearly upward. The risks are in the potential for retracements. The 1937-1938 chart shows one possible pitfall. What looks like a bottom is in actuality a pause before making a new low. One comfort is that this new low is not much below the initial plunge and recovers very quickly and eventually follows with a legitimate rally that makes up more than half the plunge.
One clear warning eminates from the 1929 era. Although the market went on to rally for a few months, it then launched a long, slow brutal bear market that erased over 80% of market value. Buyer beware.
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