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Market Cycle Theory: Kondratieff, Juglar, Kitchin

Economies pulse through nested waves of different lengths, and cycle theory names these waves to give traders a framework for where in the rhythm they stand.

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#market-cycles#seasonality
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Market Cycle Theory: Kondratieff, Juglar, Kitchin

Economies don't grow in a straight line. They pulse — through nested waves of different lengths, each driven by a different mechanism. Cycle theory names these waves and gives traders a framework for where in the rhythm they stand.

The idea that economies move in waves predates modern macroeconomics. In the early 20th century, statisticians identified several distinct cycle lengths operating simultaneously.

The four classical cycles

Cycle Length Driver Named after
Kitchin ~40 months Inventory adjustment Joseph Kitchin
Juglar ~7–11 years Fixed investment / business cycle Clément Juglar
Kuznets ~15–25 years Building & infrastructure Simon Kuznets
Kondratieff ~45–60 years Technology & credit "long wave" Nikolai Kondratieff

Schumpeter's synthesis argued these cycles are nested: a Kondratieff wave contains several Juglars; each Juglar contains several Kitchins.

The Kitchin cycle: inventory

Shortest and most relevant to traders. Firms build inventory when demand looks strong, overshoot, then cut production to clear stock. The result is a ~3–4 year pulse in GDP and earnings. Most "business cycle" swings equity markets price are Kitchin-scale.

The Juglar cycle: investment

Roughly a decade long, driven by fixed capital investment — factories, equipment, infrastructure. Expansion breeds overinvestment, overinvestment breeds recession, recession clears the overcapacity, and the cycle restarts. Juglar-scale recessions (e.g., 2001, 2008) tend to be deeper than Kitchin dips.

The Kondratieff wave: the long pulse

The longest, ~45–60 years, driven by waves of general-purpose technology and credit. Theorists tie them to steam, rail, electrification, mass production, IT, and possibly AI. Kondratieff himself was imprisoned and executed by the Soviets for work that didn't fit the planned-economy narrative.

Kondratieff waves are too long for a single trader to ride — but they frame which asset classes outperform over a career. Being born into the right long wave matters.

What cycles are — and aren't

  • Are: statistical regularities observed in historical data
  • Aren't: clockwork. Cycles vary in length, depth, and shape
  • Aren't: deterministic. Policy, war, and innovation perturb them

Cycles are climate, not weather. They shift the base rate of regimes, not the next tick.

How traders use them

  1. Kitchin (~3–4y): frame equity market regime; recessions are Kitchin-scale dips
  2. Juglar (~10y): frame the credit and capex environment; major bear markets cluster here
  3. Kondratieff (~50y): frame long-term asset allocation; a career-level backdrop
  4. Cycle nesting: when a Kitchin low coincides with a Juglar low, expect a deeper recession

Limits and cautions

  • Cycle dating is retrospective; calling a cycle low in real time is notoriously hard
  • Modern central banking smooths the amplitude but doesn't erase the waves
  • "The cycle is dead" arguments appear at every long expansion — and are always wrong eventually

Practical steps

  1. Identify which Kitchin/Juglar phase your market is in (expansion, late-cycle, recession, recovery)
  2. Weight asset allocation to the cycle phase
  3. Use cycles as a base rate, not a prediction
  4. Expect deeper drawdowns when short and medium cycles bottom together
  5. Re-read Schumpeter on innovation waves when a new general-purpose technology emerges

Bottom line

Cycles are not prophecy; they are context. The trader who knows which wave they're surfing makes better decisions than the one who thinks the sea is flat.

Related market data, powered by TradingView.

Educational content · Not financial advice · Trade at your own risk