Bear Market of 1973-74
Brian Trumbore
President/Editor, StocksandNews.com
Well, I said I was going to begin updating some of the market statistics I have previously listed on this link, but with the Dow Jones having crossed into bear market territory as of this writing, (thus joining the S&P 500, NASDAQ, and Russell 2000), I thought it would be a good time to briefly summarize the awful Bear Market of 1973-74. Following are some key dates, events making news during this period, as well as the level of the Dow at that time. There may be a lesson or two here.
6/17/72: Watergate break in.
Dow Jones closed the Friday before at 945.
10/10/72: Woodward and Bernstein break the Watergate story in the Washington Post and hint that the scope is far broader than initially thought.
Dow closes at 951.
11/7/72: President Nixon wins reelection overwhelmingly. Gallup poll reveals that 48% of Americans have never heard of Watergate.
Dow closes at 983 on 11/8. [Markets closed on Election Day.]
Dow finishes 1972 at the 1020 level.
1/11/73: Dow Jones closes at 1051, its all-time high. President Nixon lifts wage and price controls, except on food. *Inflation is the big issue. Consumer prices will rise 8.5% over the course of 1973.
1/22/73: Ceasefire announced in Paris between U.S., South Vietnam, North Vietnam and Vietcong.
Dow, 1018.
2/7/73: Senate select committee, chaired by Sam Ervin, is established to investigate 1972 campaign.
Dow, 968.
2/12/73: U.S. dollar devalued by 10%, 2nd move in 14 months.
Dow, 991.
4/30/73: Nixon aides' Haldeman, Ehrlichman, and Dean resign.
Dow, 921.
5/17/73: Senate Watergate Committee begins hearings. Senator
Howard Baker utters for the first time, "What did the president know, and when did he know it?"
Dow, 911.
6/13/73: Nixon orders 60-day retail price freeze.
Dow, 915.
6/25/73: John Dean testifies that Nixon knew much more than he let on.
Dow, 869.
7/16/73: White House taping system revealed.
Dow, 897.
10/6/73: Egypt and Syria launch invasion of Israel on Yom
Kippur.
Dow, 977. [10/8, first day market can respond.]
10/10/73: Vice President Agnew resigns as a result of scandal unrelated to Watergate.
Dow, 960.
10/12/73: Court of Appeals rules that Nixon must turn over tapes.
Dow, 978.
10/17/73: OPEC strikes back against the West for aid to Israel and launches oil embargo. The price of a barrel of crude is hiked from $3 to $5.11 (70%).
Dow, 962.
10/20/73: "Saturday Night Massacre"; Attorney General Elliot Richardson and others resign over refusal to fire special prosecutor Archibald Cox.
Dow, 960. [10/22]
*What's important to note here is that while everyone talks of the awful Bear Market of 1973-74, you can see that between 1/11 and 10/17, the Dow hardly moved. What was so bad about that? But, as is often the case, the market can be slow to discern what's really happening. The Dow would close at 987 on October 26, over a week since the embargo was announced. It wouldn't see that level again until February 1976.
Dow finishes 1973 at 850. Inflation is to rise at a 10.3% rate over the course of 1974.
1/4/74: Vietnam War officially "restarted."
Dow, 880.
3/1/74: Grand jury indicts Haldeman, Ehrlichman, and Mitchell.
Dow, 851.
3/18/74: Arab oil embargo lifted.
Dow, 874.
4/29/74: In televised speech, Nixon announces he will release transcripts. But they are loaded with discrepancies and omissions.
Dow, 835.
7/24/74: Supreme Court rules unanimously that 64 subpoenaed tapes must be turned over to District Judge Sirica. That night, the president announces he will comply.
Dow, 805.
7/29/74: House Judiciary Committee votes 27-11 to approve three articles of impeachment. [Process was from 7/27-7/29.]
Dow, 770.
8/5/74: "Smoking gun" tape revealed.
Dow, 760.
8/8/74: Nixon announces resignation.
Dow, 784. [On August 6 and 7, the Dow staged a strong 5% rally, from 760 to 797, as the tape clearly foretold Nixon's resignation. Everyone thought, for a moment, that things were going to start looking up.]
10/8/74: With President Gerald Ford now in control, the Administration announces their Whip Inflation Now program (WIN). It proves to be a miserable failure. The same day, Franklin National Bank is declared to be insolvent, the biggest bank failure in U.S. history.
Dow, 602. [23% decline from 8/8, after that 5% rally on the impending resignation.]
12/6/74: Dow Jones bottoms at 577. The bear market has lopped 45% off the average.
12/18/74: Massive layoffs in the auto industry, to the tune of
142,000.
Dow, 603.
Dow finishes 1974 at 616. Bad economic news continues for a while, but by 7/15/75, the Dow has rallied to 881, a spectacular 53% move from the 12/6/74 low.
Sources:
"The Dow Jones Averages," edited by Phyllis S. Pierce
"The Encyclopedia of American Facts and Dates," Gorton and Carruth
"Webster's Chronology of World History."
Brian Trumbore |