By Jennifer Ablan - Analysis

NEW YORK () - Less than a week ago, it seemed like the sky was falling on when the spectacular unraveling of investment (BSC.N: Quote, Profile, Research) sent , in the United States and elsewhere, into panic mode.

Then the swooped in. Its action and its brokering of a deal for JPMorgan Chase %26amp; Co. (JPM.N: Quote, Profile, Research) to take over made investors less fearful about the probable crippling of the American banking system that could have occurred.

’ fall to the brink of bankruptcy and the aggressive moves by U.S. policy makers have led many investors to believe that these events mark the beginning of a bottoming process.

For everyone who still thinks that stocks won’t hit a bottom until the Standard %26amp; Poor’s 500 .SPX falls into the bear market’s grasp, never mind.

“We are in a bottoming process, but it will really be a ‘process’ because healing of this does take time,” said Dan Fuss, of Loomis Sayles, an that oversees more than $100 billion in fixed-.

What gives Fuss and other major investors reason to believe that a bottom is in the making is that in nearly every previous one, there typically has been a huge failure of an institution that has led to extreme policy responses.

Think Enron and WorldCom, Long-Term Capital Management and Orange County.

“It usually took a big entity to fall over for aggressive, creative regulatory policy to develop,” said Bob Doll, and global chief investment officer of equities at BlackRock Inc, which manages more than $1.1 trillion in . Continued…

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