The Big Short and social media is the reason the market has not experienced any significant downturn since 2008
u/One-Signature-2706 ·
Reddit — r/wallstreetbets
· April 11, 2026 at 03:54
· ⬆ 242 pts
· 💬 129 comments
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Summary
The post argues that the movie "The Big Short" and global social media connectivity have prevented sustained market downturns since 2008 by accelerating panic and subsequent dip-buying.
The author's thesis is that rapid information dissemination causes panic to peak quickly, turning every dip into a buying opportunity and making a large-scale market recession practically infeasible.
Quality assessment: This is speculation based on anecdotal observation, not well-researched DD.
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Think about it. Is it really a coincidence? Ever since the release of that movie and ever since social media became more connected than ever globally, there has been no significant downtrend in the market.
In every single case (end of 2018, 2020, 2022, August 2024, April 2025), the market was bought up relatively quickly or the downtrend didn’t last long. The reason for this is simple. Due to the outpouring of posts of everyone pretending to be a genius and thinking they’re early on anticipating a crash everyone and their mother is already talking about, panic ensues quick, shorts multiply quick, and then those positions get used as liquidity to pump the market up even more.
This creates a scenario where no matter what kind of dip happens, the panic multiplies quick, resulting in a scenario where a large scale recession in the stock market is practically infeasible. Every **single** year in the last decade, I’ve seen posts on this sub calling for a recession due to wildly different reasons, only for nothing to happen. And every **single** time, their predictions are proven wrong.
The reason for this is simple: panic always leads to buying opportunities. Sustained panic cannot occur since panic peaks quickly due to the world being more connected and information spreading more rapidly than ever