] The Japanese experience is not unique. Bear markets ] correct in time as well as price and they typically last ] about a third the duration of the bull market they are ] correcting. The nine-year bull market in the U.S. ending ] in 1929 took three years to correct. The 24-year bull ] market from 1942 to 1966 required an eight-year ] correction. If the last bull market started in 1982, then ] history suggests the correction might not be over until ] 2006! If we measure from the 1974 lows instead of 1982, ] then this pattern would suggest 2008-2009 for a final ] bottom. ] ] As bearish as this picture is, we should point out that ] the historical examples used above to posit a much longer ] corrective period to the bull market that ended in 2000 ] consist of only three previous bull markets, including ] Japan's -- hardly a statistically significant sample! Market recovery may take longer yet |