Why are Bull and Bear Markets Called That? - YouTube

Channel: Today I Found Out

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For those who don’t know, a “bear” market, or when someone is being “bearish” in
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this context, is marked by investors being very conservative and pessimistic, resulting
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in a declining market generally marked by the mass selling off of stock.
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A “bull” market is simply the opposite of that, with investors being aggressive and
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positive, with stock prices rising as a result of this optimism.
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This “bull” and “bear” terminology first popped up in the 18th century in England.
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There are a couple different possible sources for the “bear” part of this tandem, but
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the leading theory is that it derived from an old 16th century proverb: “selling the
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bear’s skin before one has caught the bear” or alternatively, “Don’t sell the bear’s
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skin before you’ve killed him,” equivalent to, “Don’t count your eggs before they’re
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hatched.”
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By the early 18th century, when people in the stock world would sell something they
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didn’t yet own (in hopes of turning a profit by eventually being able to buy the thing
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at a cheaper rate than they sold it, before delivery was due), this gave rise to the saying
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that they “sold the bearskin” and the people themselves were called “bearskin
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jobbers”.
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One of the earliest references of this comes from an issue of The Tatler, April 26, 1709:
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Forasmuch as it is very hard to keep land in repair without ready cash, I do, out of
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my personal estate, bestow the bear-skin, which I have frequently lent to several societies
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about this town, to supply their necessities; I say, I give also the said bear-skin as an
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immediate fund to the said citizens forever

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In a later edition, June 23, 1709, it goes on to state:
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I fear the word Bear is hardly to be understood among the polite people; but I take the meaning
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to be, that one who insures a real value upon an imaginary thing, is said to sell a Bear,
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and is the same thing as a promise among courtiers, or a vow between lovers

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Yet another early instance of the term is in Daniel Defoe’s The Anatomy of Change
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Alley, published in 1719, around the time the term was popularized to something of the
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same type of definition we use today:
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Those who buy Exchange Alley Bargains are styled buyers of Bear-skins.
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The use of the word “bear” in this way was popularized thanks to one of the early
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market bubbles known as the South Sea Bubble.
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While it was a long and incredibly complex market scheme that led to the bubble, the
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gist of it was that the South Sea Company, formed in 1711, was granted by Britain a monopoly
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on all trade to South America and would be given an annual sum (6% interest plus expenses)
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from the government.
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In exchange, the new company agreed to take over large portions of the government’s
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debt.
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(In fact, this was primarily how the company actually made money throughout its century
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and a half it was in business, simply by dealing in government debt.)
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Thanks to this deal and an amazing amount of government corruption, insider trading,
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and other unscrupulous practices by certain shareholders who knew well that the company’s
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trade business had little hope of ever being profitable, the burgeoning company’s stock
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soared.
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At its peak, based on the stock price, the company was worth about ÂŁ200 million (by
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purchasing power, today this would be about ÂŁ24 billion or $37 billion; by average earnings,
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it would be ÂŁ350 billion or $537 billion).
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Besides the fact that they didn’t even have their first trading shipment until 1717, 6
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years after the trading company first formed, one of the problems was that having an exclusive
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monopoly on trading to South America from the British government at the time wasn’t
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saying much as most of the region was almost entirely held by Spain, who Britain was at
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war with.
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Nevertheless, amid rampant and widely published rumors (deftly planted by certain stock holders
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to jack up the price) of the vast wealth from gold and other resources in those regions
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and the potential promise of soon securing trade rights from Spain, the stock prices
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soared, even though the company itself wasn’t really doing any actual trading and their
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main asset, the monopoly on trade to Middle and South America, was essentially worthless,
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as the core stock holders knew well.
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Spain did eventually grant the South Sea Company rights to trade in the regions held by Spain,
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but only one ship load per year total was allowed in exchange for a percentage of the
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profits.
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Needless to say, the inability to do any actual real volume of trading and the fact that war
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once again broke out in 1718 between Spain and Britain causing much of the company’s
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scant physical assets to be seized by Spain, the market crash that followed wasn’t pretty.
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As to the “bull” name for rising markets, in this case we have to do a little more speculation
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as the documented evidence just isn’t there.
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The leading theory is that it came about as a direct result of the term “bear”.
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Specifically, the first known instance of the market term “bull” popped up in 1714,
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shortly after the “bear” term popped up.
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At the time, it was something of a common practice to bear and bull-bait.
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Essentially, with bear baiting, they’d chain a bear (or bears) up in an arena, and then
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set some other animals to attack the bear(s) (usually dogs) as a form of entertainment
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for spectators seated in the arena.
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While bears were one of the more popular animals to use in these games, bulls were also commonly
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used.
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More rarely, other animals were used such as in one instance where an ape was tied to
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a pony’s back and dogs were set on them.
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According to one spectator, the spectacle of the dogs tearing the pony to shreds while
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the ape screamed and desperately tried to stay on the pony’s back, out of reach of
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the snapping jaws of the dogs, was “very laughable”

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In any event, the popularity of bear and bull baiting, along with perhaps the association
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with bulls charging, is thought to have probably been why “bull” was chosen as something
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of the antithesis of a “bear”, shortly after “bear” first popped up in the stock
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sense.
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But, of course, we can’t be at all sure on this one as there wasn’t the more lengthy
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documented progression of definition as with the “bear” term.
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A common myth often put forth as to the origin of “bull” and “bear” market terminology
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is that it comes from the last names of two prominent banking businesses, the Bulteels
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and the Barings, the former supposedly tending to be extremely aggressive in their investments
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and the latter supposedly being much more conservative.
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While both the Barings bank and the Bulteel bank did in fact exist, there are a couple
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problems here.
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The first is that the only Bulteel bank around this era wasn’t prominent at all, certainly
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not enough to spawn such a term.
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Second, and more importantly, is that both the Barings bank and the Bulteel bank were
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founded well after “bull” and “bear” were already common stock market terms.