A Quote by John Templeton

There will always be bull markets followed by bear markets followed by bull markets — © John Templeton
There will always be bull markets followed by bear markets followed by bull markets
Bull markets are great, but they breed complacency. Bear markets can be energizing. Instead of fretting over the decline in your net worth, think opportunistically about all those bargains - and the potential gains when, inevitably, a bull market returns.
Bull markets have valuation froth and bull markets have commitment forth. Now just by valuation froth, bull markets do not end.
Bull markets and Bear markets can obscure mathematical laws, they cannot repeal them.
I think when markets go up and there is no manipulation in markets and people question the market going up and it keeps going up, that is a true bull market.
It never was my thinking that made the big money for me. It always was my sitting. Got that? My sitting tight! It is no trick at all to be right on the market. You always find lots of early bulls in bull markets and early bears in bear markets. I've known many men who were right at exactly the right time, and began buying or selling stocks when prices were at the very level which should show the greatest profit. And their experience invariably matched mine--that is, they made no real money out of it. Men who can both be right and sit tight are uncommon.
Markets tend to shake you up before a bull run.
Bull markets are Test matches and not 50-over games.
The strongest bull markets I've been in are built on walls of worry.
Markets are a social construction, they're made from institutions. We in a democratic society create markets, we constitute markets, we bring them into existence, and we shouldn't turn markets over to a narrow group of people who regulate them and run them in their interests, rather they should be run democratically for the common good.
Investment success does not require glamour stocks or bull markets.
There's been a dichotomy in the world financial markets over the last 30 years between the developed markets and the developing markets. Brazil, for example, always had to pay a lot more in interest to borrow money than governments in developed nations.
Bull-markets are born on pessimism, grow on skepticism, mature on optimism and die on euphoria.
Since the dawn of civilization, markets have been ubiquitous. Many of us have benefited from their focus and efficiency. Yet two widely held beliefs - that markets are best left unregulated and that markets are inherently benign - are naive and outdated.
Markets may in the short-term correct. But in a bull market the correction is always sharp, swift and short-lived.
Timidity prompted by past failures causes investors to miss the most important bull markets.
Secular cycles are the long periods - as long as decades - that come to define each market era. These cycles alternate between long-term bull and bear markets.
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