Chicago Sun-Times

Bull market’s 9th birthday is both happy and hated

- Adam Shell

When it comes to longevity, Wall Street’s current bull has some really good genes.

This bull market for stocks turns 9 on Friday. It began March 9, 2009, the day U. S. stocks finally stopped falling after the worst market rout since the Great Depression.

It’s now the second- longest bull in history, having survived all sorts of fears and shocks, from wars and hurricanes to a government shutdown, a European debt crisis, terrorism and threats of nuclear war.

And after all that, it has a shot at overtaking the longest bull ever, the famed 1990s rally that finally died when the tech bubble burst in 2000.

But for the current bull to outlive that beast, the stock market must avoid for the next six months a 20% drop fromits all- time high on Jan. 26. And that means shrugging off the recent worries that can trigger a severe stock swoon, like the return of wild price swings, a potential trade war between the U. S. and its trading partners and fears that borrowing costs are headed sharply higher.

“This bull might be old, but remember bull markets don’t die of old age, they die of excesses,” says John Lynch, chief investment strategist at LPL Financial.

And, for now, Lynch hasn’t spotted any danger signs, such as “overspendi­ng, overborrow­ing and overconfid­ence” by shoppers, investors and businesses that are often seen at “major tipping points” for a stock market tumble.

So howhas this bull, often dubbed the most- hated in history, which has had more doubters than believers during its long rise and gain of 325%, done it?

Its success, Wall Street pros say, has a lot to do with how loathed it’s been — a pessimisti­c mind- set among Main Street investors who were scared off by the Great Recession.

That trauma kept them from getting overly optimistic and paying too much for stocks in the bull years that followed.

But staying out of the market turned out to be a missed opportunit­y.

Investors who were savvy enough to invest $ 100,000 in a broad index fund at the start of the bull run and held it the whole time would have seen their money more than quadruple in value to $ 425,000.

Those who jumped in benefited from a decade of record- low borrowing costs, engineered by the Federal Reserve to provide a lift to a hard- hit economy during the Great Recession.

The fact that the U. S. economy, despite being nearly nine years into its recovery, has grown at a sub- par rate for a long time also worked in the stock market’s favor.

The reason: Economic growth was strong enough to lift corporate profits but not quite robust enough to overheat the economy and force the nation’s central bank to cool it off with too many interest rate hikes.

The bull — despite last month’s scare over rising inflation and interest rates, and now worries over tariffs — still has a lot of good things working in its favor, says Dan Suzuki, senior U. S. equity strategist at Bank of America Merrill Lynch.

 ??  ?? GETTY IMAGES AND CHRISTOPHE­R DYE/ USA TODAY NETWORK
GETTY IMAGES AND CHRISTOPHE­R DYE/ USA TODAY NETWORK

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