Monday, April 6, 2009

What The Past Teaches...

Courtesy: The Wall Street Journal

This bear market has been a painful experience for many, but a new experience only for some.

Veteran fund managers in the US vividly remember the 1973-74 market slide -- the worst downturn since the Great Depression, until now. Seasoned fund-company executives, too, have seen this kind of trouble before.

Stocks have a long way to go to climb out of this bear market, in which the Dow Jones Industrial Average fell as much as 54% from its October 2007 high. But the market climbed back from its 45% drubbing in 1973-74.

Some investors thought they saw promising signs last month, when the Dow gained 21% in just 13 trading days after hitting a new low on March 9. The average diversified U.S.-stock fund was down 9.1% during the first quarter, after gaining 8.4% in March, according to figures from Lipper Inc.

In the '70s bear market, things "just looked hopeless," recalls Mr. Harry "Hersh" Cohen, 68 years old, Chief Investment Officer of ClearBridge Advisors, an affiliate of Legg Mason Inc. Mr. Cohen has been a money manager since 1969. In 1973-74 soaring energy prices and inflation, war and political turmoil added up to two years of unforgettable gloom. But recovery did come, as it has after each slump since.