They became institutional darlings in the early 1970s and sparked a radical shift away from value investing.
They were “one-decision” stocks, to buy and hold for life, as quality franchises allowed them to earn high returns on capital into the future.
Fortune proclaimed, “The flush of robust prosperity is suffusing the economy.”
L.O. Hooper of the brokerage W.E. Hutton & Co said, “The economy is becoming less and less vulnerable to big booms and big busts.”
On January 23, President Nixon announced the end of the Vietnam war.
Over 300 public stock offerings were withdrawn as unsalable during this period.
“The stream of equity capital to US industry has run dry,” Business Week concluded.
Bulls were lulled into believing that a new leg up had begun.
The two-month rally left the Dow just 6% shy of its record high in January.
But the market internals were not confirming the advance.
Oil prices quadrupled over the next six months.
nflation was already spiraling out of control and the US economy entered a recession in November.
For the full year, Treasury bills earned 8% compared to the Dow’s 15% loss.
Valuations collapsed to a 20-year low.
Barron’s columnist Alan Abelson wrote, “Never have so many said so much to such little purpose.”
No one had any confidence in what the new year will bring.
Inflation and interest rates crept higher, while business profits buckled under the weight of a recession.
“It was like a mudslide,” said Ralph Wanger of the Acorn Fund. “Every day you came in, watched the market go down another percent, and went home.”
“There’s really no place to hide,” said Bill Grimsley of Investment Company of America.
Fortune ran a story titled “A Case for Gloom About Stocks,” which said the bear market might not yet be finished.
The bear market of 1973-74 was over, 21 months after it began. The 45% decline was the worst ever since the Great Depression.
From the highs, Coca-Cola fell 69%, Xerox 71%, McDonald’s 72%, Avon 86%, Disney 87% and Polaroid 91%.
The Dow’s January 1973 high would not be surpassed for another nine years.