No one enjoys watching markets fall. But history shows that downturns are an inevitable part of investing — and, more importantly, that recoveries have always followed. For retirees and those planning for retirement, understanding the lessons of past crashes can help you stay calm, stay invested, and stay on track.
The Biggest Market Downturns of the Last 50 Years
Below are the outlines of the biggest market downturns of the last 50 years. Note: We recovered and far surpassed the previous highs of each crisis. However, knowing history can help prepare you for the future. And, with the new Market Risk Explorer that is part of the Boldin Planner, you can model these and other potential downturns.
1973–1974: The Oil Crisis Recession
- Triggered by the OPEC oil embargo and runaway inflation.
- The S&P 500 fell nearly 48% from January 1973 to October 1974.
- Recovery took more than 7 years — testing investors’ patience.
1987: Black Monday
- On October 19, 1987, the Dow Jones plunged 22% in a single day.
- Despite the shock, the market fully recovered in under two years.
2000–2002: The Dot-Com Bust
- Tech stocks soared and then collapsed, wiping out trillions.
- The Nasdaq lost nearly 78% peak to trough; the S&P 500 fell 49%.
- It took until 2007 for the S&P 500 to reclaim its highs.
2008–2009: The Global Financial Crisis
- Sparked by the housing market collapse and failures in the banking system.
- The S&P 500 dropped 57% between October 2007 and March 2009.
- Investors who held on saw a full recovery within 5+ years.
2020: The COVID-19 Shock
- Markets fell 34% in just over a month as the world shut down.
- Massive stimulus fueled one of the fastest rebounds in history.
What Downturns Teach Us
Every market decline feels different in the moment, but history leaves us with clear lessons. Downturns are part of investing, and while they can be unnerving, they also carry valuable reminders for building a resilient retirement.
Markets are unpredictable
Each crisis had a different cause — oil shocks, tech bubbles, housing collapses, even a global pandemic — showing that no one can forecast the next downturn with certainty. The best defense isn’t prediction, but preparation.
You can’t predict the future, so act consistently
No one knows when the next downturn will hit or how long it will last. What you can control is your response. By saving steadily, investing regularly, and sticking with your plan through ups and downs, you put consistency to work — and history shows consistency beats guesswork every time.
Recoveries sometimes take time
Some rebounds are fast, like in 2020; others drag out for years, like in 1973 or 2000. Knowing this helps you set realistic expectations and avoid panic if the recovery feels slow.
But recoveries often happen faster than we think
Market momentum has a way of surprising us on the upside and stocks typically soar back upward well before the crisis that provoked the selloff has run its course.
The market recovery from the 2008-09 financial crisis illustrates this vividly. Despite assurances from the pundits that investors should not expect a v-shaped recovery, stocks did exactly that. From the market low in March 2009, the Dow Jones index gained 30% in the span of just three months. By the end of the year, it was up more than 60% from its low point.
Staying invested matters
Those who sell at the bottom lock in losses. Those who stay invested — or even add to their positions — benefit the most when markets turned upward again.
Building resilience is key
Downturns early in retirement are especially risky because you’re withdrawing from savings while markets are down. This “sequence of returns risk” can compound losses, making it vital to build flexibility into your plan.
Downturns can create opportunities
Market declines may open doors to tax strategies like Roth conversions or the chance to buy investments at lower prices. Planning ahead helps you act confidently when opportunities appear.
Planning for downturns is essential
A thoughtful strategy keeps short-term volatility from derailing long-term goals. With the right preparation, you can navigate storms and stay focused on your future.
The golden rule: never sell low and buy high
Stay calm and steady when the markets go crazy. Chasing the market up and you risk buying high. Chasing it down and you risk selling low. History rewards patience and discipline — two traits that serve every retiree well.
Here are more lessons from financial crises and tips for what to do during a down market.
How to Build Resilience Into Your Retirement Plan
At Boldin, we believe you can’t control when the next downturn will happen — but you can prepare for it. Here’s how:
- Use the NEW Market Risk Explorer. Stress test your plans with this new tool in the Boldin Planner.
- Keep a cash buffer. Having 1–5 years of spending set aside can protect you from selling investments at a loss.
- Diversify your income sources. Social Security, part-time work, or even home equity can serve as flexible backup funding.
- Stay flexible. Adjusting withdrawals or spending in down years can dramatically extend the life of your savings.
Here are more tips for a down market.
The Bottom Line
Market downturns aren’t an exception — they’re part of the journey. The lesson from the past 50 years is clear: resilience beats prediction. With the right preparation, you don’t need to fear the next crash.
The Boldin Planner helps you stress test your retirement against downturns, model different strategies, and build confidence for the future — no matter what the market brings.