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A secular bull market is a period in which the stock market index is continually reaching all-time highs with only brief periods of correction, as during the 1990s, and can last upwards of 15 years. A cyclical bull market is a period in which the stock market index is reaching 52-week or multi-year highs and may briefly peak at all-time highs ...
Download as PDF; Printable version; In other projects ... Day high Day low Point swing Net change 1 ... 2,280.52 173.05 −131.09 10 2020-03-25
An intraday percentage gain is defined as the difference between the previous trading session's closing price and the intraday high of the following trading session. The closing percentage change denotes the ultimate percentage change recorded after the corresponding trading session's close.
(Reuters) -Wall Street rose on Monday, with the S&P 500 and the Dow touching fresh intraday record highs, as investors geared up for a week packed with corporate earnings and crucial economic data ...
August 2011 stock markets fall: 1 Aug 2011 USA: S&P 500 entered a short-lived bear market between 2 May 2011 (intraday high: 1,370.58) and 4 October 2011 (intraday low: 1,074.77), a decline of 21.58%. The stock market rebounded thereafter and ended the year flat.
On 19 February, Asia-Pacific and European stock markets closed mostly up, [51] [52] while the Dow Jones Industrial Average finished up and the NASDAQ Composite and the S&P 500 finished at record highs. [53] Oil prices rose by another 2%, [54] while yields on 10-year and 30-year U.S. Treasury securities fell to 1.56% and 2.00% respectively. [55]
March 24, 2000: The S&P 500 index reaches an all-time intraday high of 1552.87 during the dot-com bubble. It hit this level again on July 13, 2007. October 9, 2007: The index closes at a record high of 1565.15, the highest prior to the financial crisis of 2007–2008. Two days later, the index hit an intraday record high of 1576.09.
Greenblatt (b. 1957), an American professional asset manager since the 1980s, suggests purchasing 30 "good companies": cheap stocks with a high earnings yield and a high return on capital. He describes this as a simplified version of the strategy employed by Warren Buffett and Charlie Munger of Berkshire Hathaway .