The leading stock market indices, the S&P BSE Sensex and the Nifty 50, are frequently scaling new highs. Naturally, at this time, the most frequently asked question is: is this the right time to invest, especially when the market is on a high? Over the past 44 years for which the Sensex data is easily available, it is quite evident that there is money to be made for investors who stay the course. For investors who invested in 1979 when the index was at 100, today the worth of that money is well over 65,000 times. For an optimist, there is no way you can lose money in the stock markets as long as you stay invested indefinitely.
A bull market is defined as a period of time when major stock market indexes are generally rising, eventually reaching new highs. But there are many other definitions of a bull market and experts keep changing their definition of a bull run based on evolving market conditions. So, there is a school of thought which describes a bull run when the market indices gain 20 per cent from the lows. Some describe it as a phase when all segments (sectors and market capitalisation) of the stock markets gain. All these definitions may never be clear right now, because, effectively, a bull run is best described based on data after it has run its course.