Mark Hulbert: Why Retirees Shouldnt Fear A Bear Market

Don’t give up hope.

I’m referring to what many retirees are most afraid of: Running out of money before they die. An Allianz Life survey found that far more retirees are afraid of outliving their money than they are of dying—61% to 39%. This ever-present background fear is especially rearing its ugly head right now, given the bear market that to many came out of nowhere.

In just three months’ time, the S&P 500 SPX, +0.30%  dropped more than 20% (on an intraday basis), thereby satisfying the semiofficial definition of a bear market. Retirement planning projections made at the end of the third quarter, right as the stock market was registering its all-time highs, now need to be revised.

The reason not to give up hope is that the stock market typically recovers from bear markets in a far shorter period of time than most doom and gloomers think. Consider what I found when measuring how long it took, after each of the 36 bear markets since 1900 on the bear market calendar maintained by Ned Davis Research, for equities to make it back to the bull market highs that preceded those bear markets. My measurements took into account dividends and inflation, which is important because analyses based on nominal price action alone exaggerate bear market recovery times.

Believe it or not, the average recovery time was “just” 3.2 years. Assuming the bear market that began at the end of September ends today, and assuming the recovery time lives up to historical averages, the stock market will once again trade in new-high territory in December 2021.

Furthermore, it wouldn’t take even this long if it weren’t for some outliers in the calculation of this historical average. The median recovery time—that length of time such that half of the bear market recoveries were shorter and half longer—is 1.9 years. Assuming the recovery time equals this median, the stock market will once again be in new-high territory in September 2020.

To be sure, there’s no guarantee that the future will be like the past, of course. And even if it is, the recovery time from the current bear market could end up being longer than the median or the average.

But even then we need to exercise care not to exaggerate the recovery time. Take the financial crisis, which led to the worst bear market since the Great Depression. By my calculations, the stock market on a dividend-adjusted inflation-adjusted basis took 5.4 years to overcome that bear market and surpass its pre-bear-market high from October 2007—March 2013, in other words.

And while 5.4 years is a long time, it doesn’t have to be devastating. For example, that recovery time is less than the life expectancy of any male currently aged 86 or younger, according to the actuarial tables at the Social Security Administration. Any female aged 90 or less has a life expectancy greater than this recovery time from the financial crisis. Most retirees that old should have long since reduced their equity exposure, of course.

What is far more likely to make the current bear market devastating is not the recovery time but throwing in the towel at the bottom, going to cash, and not getting back in until the stock market has produced a significant rally. If you do that, you are guaranteed to suffer 100% of the losses and benefit from only a fraction of the recovery.

The losses we’ve endured since late September are painful. But we’ve already incurred them. Going to cash only adds insult to injury—unless you happen to be the rare market timer who succeeds in getting back into equities at a lower level than where the market stood when you get out.

For more information, including descriptions of the Hulbert Sentiment Indices, go to The Hulbert Financial Digest or email mark@hulbertratings.com.

RECENT NEWS

The Case For Hedging Foreign Exchange Exposure Amidst Economic Divergence

In today's global economy, characterized by increasing economic divergence among major nations, investors face a dauntin... Read more

ETF Market Update: Assessing The Impact Of Receding US Rate Cut Expectations

The ETF market has been subject to significant shifts in recent months, with one of the key drivers being the evolving e... Read more

Market Response: Understanding The Drop In Arm Shares

In the fast-paced world of technology, market reactions can serve as barometers of industry health and company performan... Read more

Market Watch: Investor Sentiment Points To Steady Rates As BoE Convenes

As the Bank of England's Monetary Policy Committee (MPC) prepares to convene, investor sentiment plays a pivotal role in... Read more

The Department Of Justice Vs. Google: A Clash Over Market Power

The culmination of the high-profile antitrust trial between Google and the Department of Justice marks a significant mil... Read more

Mitigating Risks In The Bond Market: Strategies For Uncertain Times

In today's volatile bond market, characterized by liquidity concerns and rising interest rates, effective risk managemen... Read more