This is the question that keeps coming up and will only be answered in due time.
Found this info and thought it would be interesting to post, no one really wants to think a new bear market is on the way and many are even trying to use past information to find out future results before they even occur.
Bear market or bull market correction, I'm going with a new bear market.
Bear Market or Bull Market Correction?
The always insightful folks at Bespoke Investment Group looked at the prior 10%+ corrections since 1927 and analyzed how many of them that never reached bull market territory (20%+ corrections) eventually reached new bull market peaks using the S&P 500. What they found was that there have been 58 declines of 10%+ from bull market peaks and 57% ended up not becoming bear markets and 43% did. There have been 33 corrections that did not reach the 20% threshold but only seven of those, or 21% of them declined more than the present correction and didnât reach bear market territory. Intuitively, the greater the decline, the greater the likelihood of reaching bear market territory as a simple correction morphs into a bear market, with the average bear market decline being 35.5%.
http://www.financialsense.com/Market/cpuplava/2010/0610.html
Found this info and thought it would be interesting to post, no one really wants to think a new bear market is on the way and many are even trying to use past information to find out future results before they even occur.
Bear market or bull market correction, I'm going with a new bear market.
Bear Market or Bull Market Correction?
The always insightful folks at Bespoke Investment Group looked at the prior 10%+ corrections since 1927 and analyzed how many of them that never reached bull market territory (20%+ corrections) eventually reached new bull market peaks using the S&P 500. What they found was that there have been 58 declines of 10%+ from bull market peaks and 57% ended up not becoming bear markets and 43% did. There have been 33 corrections that did not reach the 20% threshold but only seven of those, or 21% of them declined more than the present correction and didnât reach bear market territory. Intuitively, the greater the decline, the greater the likelihood of reaching bear market territory as a simple correction morphs into a bear market, with the average bear market decline being 35.5%.
http://www.financialsense.com/Market/cpuplava/2010/0610.html