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Have you ever noticed how markets follow recurring patterns? Boom, panic, recovery... the cycle continues. What few know is that a 19th-century farmer had already identified these patterns long ago. I'm talking about Samuel Benner, a fascinating figure whose research on market cycles is still remarkably relevant today.
Samuel Benner was not a trained economist. He was an agricultural entrepreneur who experienced firsthand the consequences of economic cycles. After suffering heavy financial losses during crises and crop failures, he decided to dig deeper. Why did these disasters repeat? Was there a pattern? Curiosity drove him to find answers, and what he discovered became the Benner Cycle.
In 1875, Samuel Benner published his book "Benner's Prophecies of Future Ups and Downs in Prices." It was not just a collection of observations but a real framework for predicting market behavior. What fascinated him was the recurring nature of financial panics and periods of prosperity. He noticed that these events were not random but followed predictable time intervals.
The cycle is structured into three main phases. The 'A' years are panic years, when the market crashes. Samuel Benner identified a pattern every 18-20 years: 1927, 1945, 1965, 1981, 1999, 2019... did you see how 2019 actually led to a significant correction? The 'B' years are the best times to sell, when prices hit their highs and prosperity is at its peak. Here we find years like 1926, 1945, 1962, 1980, 2007, and now 2026 — right now. The 'C' years are periods of accumulation, when prices are low and opportunities abound. 1931, 1942, 1958, 1985, 2012 were years when those brave enough to buy were rewarded later.
Now, Samuel Benner developed this theory mainly by observing agricultural commodity prices — iron, corn, pigs — but the interesting part is that his work proved applicable far beyond agriculture. Traders and investors have adapted his framework to stocks, bonds, and more recently, cryptocurrencies.
For those operating in the crypto market, this is especially intriguing. Bitcoin has its four-year halving cycle, true, but the bigger idea is that Benner's cycles capture the essence of market psychology. Euphoria, panic, accumulation, selling. These themes repeat regardless of the asset.
Think about it: when you're in a bull market, everyone is shouting to buy, prices soar, valuations become crazy. It’s the 'B' year. It’s the time to take profits and exit strategically. Conversely, when the market crashes, fear dominates, and assets are trading at ridiculous prices, you’re in the 'C' year. That’s when true accumulators do their best work. Bitcoin, Ethereum, anything crashing — it’s the time to build solid positions.
What fascinates about Samuel Benner is that he was not a theorist. He was a man who lost money, rebuilt, and sought to understand why cycles happen. His legacy is not just an academic theory but a lesson in humility and patient observation. Markets are not as chaotic as they seem. They follow rhythms, cycles, and human nature.
For those wanting to navigate modern markets with a long-term strategic vision, the Benner Cycle offers a compass. It’s not a crystal ball, but a map that has worked for over 150 years. And looking at 2026 as a peak year according to this framework, it might be the right moment to start thinking in terms of long-term positioning and portfolio strategy.