by winston » Tue Jun 03, 2025 7:43 am
The second stage of this bear market will be brutal
by Jeff Clark.
Now, perhaps your reaction is, “what bear market?”
As I write Monday, the S&P is just 4% below its all-time high set back in February. Plus, this earnings season has been strong; and on Friday, the University of Michigan’s consumer sentiment survey showed sentiment improved in late May.
If anything, it feels like bullish momentum could carry us deep into the summer.
Here’s Jeff explaining what he sees coming next:
This is what bear markets do.
The first rally phase in a bear market is designed to punish bearish traders who’ve held on to short positions for too long and then coax reluctant bulls back into the market.
It makes folks question if we’re even in a bear market at all.
Then, the bear takes another swipe.
To illustrate, Jeff points toward a similar setup during the bear market in 2022.
In the chart below, note how the S&P peaked in early January of that year, then suffered its first decline phase – about 16% in two months.
But then, it delivered a stunning “V” shaped rally where it recovered most of that initial decline. “What bear market?” was likely the reaction from investors.
V-shaped rallies are dangerous. Investors who sold at the bottom regret their decision. They buy back in at higher prices.
And, this time, they vow not to get “bluffed” out of positions on the next decline because apparently, stocks only go up.
During the second decline phase, these investors hold onto their stocks and endure larger losses because they’re convinced they made a mistake selling the first time around.
Jeff believes that even if he’s wrong, the S&P’s technical set-up limits additional gains from here:
If I am wrong, since the market is already in an extended condition – with the various moving averages expanded far away from each other – we’re not going to miss out on a huge move higher.
There’s not much fuel remaining for that sort of a move.
As we’ve highlighted in past Digests, Jeff believes we’re in the early stages of a bear market that won’t bottom until later this fall – potentially, somewhere around 4,125. But at that point, we’ll have what Jeff calls a “generational buying opportunity.”
Jeff warns that the financial sector will lead the market lower over the next several weeks.
Behind this call is the Bullish Percent Index for the Financial Sector (BPFINA) that just triggered a new sell signal.
It appears the bear is gearing up to take another swipe.
The last time the BPFINA generated a sell signal was in December.
Source: Investor Place
It's all about "how much you made when you were right" & "how little you lost when you were wrong"