Been staring at this market cycle chart for a while now, and honestly it's kind of wild how consistent the pattern actually is. History really does repeat itself in markets.



So here's what I'm seeing: there's this rhythm that keeps playing out – panic years where everything crashes and fear takes over, then good times roll in with crazy high prices where everyone thinks it'll never end, and then you get those hard times with rock-bottom prices where most people are too scared to even look at their portfolios. That's when the real money gets made, but nobody wants to hear it.

The chart maps out these periods when to make money across decades, and the timing is almost eerie. 1927, 1945, 1965, 1981, 1999, 2019... panic years. Then the booms follow – 1929, 1936, 1953, 1989, 2007... prices go parabolic and everyone's euphoric. And then the crashes set up the next opportunity cycle.

What gets me is how accurate this pattern has been for identifying the real buy windows. 1924, 1932, 1942, 1958, 1969, 1985, 2002, 2020 – those were the years when assets were dirt cheap and sentiment was absolutely toxic. That's the chart telling you where generational wealth actually gets built.

The core lesson from this periods when to make money framework is simple: buy when there's blood in the streets, sell when everyone's euphoric. Every crash is literally just setting up the next bull run, and every bull run inevitably ends in panic. It's mechanical.

We're in an interesting spot right now in 2026. If this cycle holds, we should be seeing what the chart predicted. The question is whether you have the discipline to actually follow the pattern instead of your emotions. Most people don't, which is probably why most people don't get rich.

Crypto might move faster and wilder than traditional markets, but the underlying psychology? That never changes. Fear and greed will always drive the cycles. The chart's been right before. Probably will be again.
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