What Is a Bear Market? How to Protect Your Portfolio When Stocks Are Falling

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What Is a Bear Market? How to Protect Your Portfolio When Stocks Are Falling - bear icon with red downward arrow and gold recovery arrow - FinanceCompassPro

Markets do not move upward in a straight line forever.

Every investor eventually faces a period when stock prices seem to do nothing but fall. And when that happens, many people make the same costly mistake: they panic and sell.

Understanding what a bear market is, how long it typically lasts, and what to actually do during one could be the difference between locking in permanent losses and coming out the other side significantly stronger.

Here’s everything a beginner needs to know.

What Is a Bear Market? Stocks Down 20%+ Here's What to Do - navy background with bear and red falling chart - FinanceCompassPro

What Is a Bear Market?

A bear market is generally defined as a decline of 20% or more in a major stock market index, such as the S&P 500, from a recent high.

That 20% threshold is the benchmark most financial analysts and media outlets use. A smaller decline – typically 10% to 19% – is called a correction, not a full bear market.

“Bear markets feel permanent while you’re in them. History shows they never are.”

The term “bear” comes from the way a bear attacks: swiping downward. In contrast, a bull thrusts its horns upward – hence bull market for rising prices.

How Often Do Bear Markets Happen?

More often than most people expect – but less often than fear makes it feel.

Historically, bear markets have occurred every few years, though the exact count varies depending on how they are measured. That works out to approximately one bear market every 3.5 to 4 years.

Here’s what historical data shows:

MetricAverage
How oftenEvery ~3.5–4 years
Average decline~36%
Average duration~9–10 months
Recovery time~2 years (median)

The key number: the average bear market lasts less than a year. The average bull market lasts over 4 years. Time spent growing significantly outweighs time spent declining.

What Causes a Bear Market?

Bear markets don’t have a single cause. They’re typically triggered by a combination of factors:

  • Economic recession – when GDP contracts and unemployment rises
  • Rising interest rates – higher rates make borrowing more expensive and reduce corporate profits
  • Geopolitical crisis – wars, pandemics, or major policy shifts that create uncertainty
  • Asset bubbles bursting – when overvalued sectors correct sharply
  • Loss of investor confidence – sometimes fear feeds itself, and selling accelerates

Bear Markets in History - 2000 Dot-Com Crash, 2007 Financial Crisis, 2020 COVID Crash, 2022 Bear Market timeline with recovery arrows - FinanceCompassPro

Famous Bear Markets in History

Knowing what past bear markets looked like – and how they ended – is one of the most useful tools for staying calm during the next one.

2000–2002 Dot-Com Crash
The S&P 500 fell approximately 49%. The NASDAQ fell nearly 78%. Cause: technology bubble burst after years of speculation in internet companies with no real profits.

2007–2009 Financial Crisis
The S&P 500 fell approximately 57%. Cause: collapse of the U.S. housing market and mortgage-backed securities. This was the deepest bear market since the Great Depression.

2020 COVID Crash
The S&P 500 fell approximately 34% in just 33 days – one of the fastest declines in history. Then recovered completely within 5 months.

2022 Bear Market
The S&P 500 fell approximately 25%. Cause: Federal Reserve aggressively raising interest rates to combat the highest inflation in 40 years.

Every single one of these ended. Every single one was followed by new all-time highs.

Don't Sell Keep Investing - Every Bear Market Has Ended - long-term S&P 500 growth chart through multiple downturns - FinanceCompassPro

What Should You Do During a Bear Market?

1. Don’t Sell in Panic

Selling during a downturn locks in your losses permanently. If you sell when the market is down 30%, you need a 43% gain just to get back to where you started – and you won’t participate in that recovery if you’re sitting in cash.

2. Keep Investing (Dollar-Cost Averaging)

Bear markets are, by definition, a sale on stocks. Every dollar you invest when prices are 30% lower buys 43% more shares than at the previous high. Continuing to invest regularly during a bear market is one of the most powerful long-term wealth-building strategies available.

For a full breakdown of this strategy, see our guide on dollar-cost averaging explained.

3. Review Your Asset Allocation

If a 30% market drop is causing you serious stress, your portfolio may be more aggressively positioned than your actual risk tolerance allows. A bear market is a useful reminder to make sure your allocation matches your timeline.

To understand how to set the right mix, see our guide on what is asset allocation.

4. Avoid Checking Your Portfolio Daily

Frequent portfolio checking during a bear market amplifies anxiety and increases the temptation to make emotional decisions. Most long-term investors are better served by checking quarterly rather than daily.

5. Focus on Your Time Horizon

If you’re investing for retirement 20 or 30 years away, a bear market that lasts 10 months is a small blip on a very long timeline. The S&P 500 has returned approximately 10% per year on average – including every bear market in that history.

Can You Actually Profit During a Bear Market?

Some investors do – but it requires strategies that carry significant risk and are generally not appropriate for beginners.

Short selling involves betting that a stock’s price will fall. If it does, you profit. If it rises, your losses can theoretically be unlimited.

Inverse ETFs are funds designed to move in the opposite direction of an index. They can provide short-term protection but are not designed for long-term holding.

For most beginner investors, the most effective strategy in a bear market is simply continuing to invest at lower prices and holding long enough to benefit from the recovery.

Bear Market vs. Recession: What’s the Difference?

 Bear MarketRecession
What it measuresStock market pricesEconomic activity (GDP)
Definition20%+ decline in stock indexA broad slowdown in economic activity, often associated with negative GDP growth
CauseInvestor sentiment, valuationsBusiness activity, employment, spending
RelationshipOften happen together, but not alwaysA recession can cause a bear market, and vice versa

The stock market often begins declining before a recession is officially declared – and often begins recovering before the recession is officially over. For more on how recessions are officially identified in the United States, see the NBER’s Business Cycle Dating overview. This is why trying to time the market around economic data rarely works.

How Long Does It Take to Recover?

Recovery time varies widely depending on the depth and cause of the bear market.

  • The 2020 COVID crash recovered in roughly 5 months
  • The 2007–2009 financial crisis took approximately 4 years to fully recover
  • The 2000–2002 dot-com crash took approximately 7 years to recover

The single most important variable in recovery is time in the market. Investors who stayed invested through each of these bear markets recovered. Investors who sold at the bottom did not recover at the same rate.

The Bottom Line

A bear market is a decline of 20% or more in stock prices, typically lasting less than a year. They happen roughly every 3–4 years, feel alarming while they’re happening, and have ended every single time in history.

The right response to a bear market is almost always the same: don’t sell, keep investing if you can, and remember that you’re a long-term investor – not a short-term speculator.

Understanding your risk tolerance before a bear market hits – not during one – is the best preparation. See our guide on what is risk tolerance to build that foundation now.

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