Bull market is simply
the opposite of bear market.
The opposite of a bear market.
Not exact matches
(The unfortunate
opposite of buying more heavily in
bear markets).
The
opposite of a bull
market is a
bear market, which is characterized by falling prices and typically shrouded in pessimism.
The
opposite of a bull
market is a
bear market, which is characterized by falling prices and typically shrouded in pessimism.
Of course, the
opposite is that small - caps tend to underperform large - caps during
bear markets.
A
bear market of course, is the
opposite of the bull
market — when the
market is declining for a length
of time or declines very quickly (ie a crash) then that is considered a
bear market.
It's the
opposite of a bull
market (which is why the
bear market is sometimes known as a «heifer
market»).
The 4 % rule is really a guideline rather than a hard and fast rule — If your equities perform better than expected then you can spend a bit more than the 4 % rule amount however the
opposite is also true, if you encounter a
bear market and the value
of your portfolio drops then you should be prepared to cut back on the withdrawals.
And if you are short term bearish
of the emerging
markets, then the Horizons BetaPro MSCI Emerging Markets Bear Plus ETF (trading under the symbol HJD) aims to achieve the equal and opposite result of the Bull Pl
markets, then the Horizons BetaPro MSCI Emerging
Markets Bear Plus ETF (trading under the symbol HJD) aims to achieve the equal and opposite result of the Bull Pl
Markets Bear Plus ETF (trading under the symbol HJD) aims to achieve the equal and
opposite result
of the Bull Plus ETF.
If I understand it correctly, there are two different CFD provider modes
of operation: DMA (direct
market access), where the provider will immediately hedge all positions with matching trades on an exchange, and
market making, where he takes on the
opposite position
of his clients» trades,
bearing some risk.
A
bear market is the
opposite of a bull
market.