-- A deeper look into
what bull and bear markets are.
Not exact matches
You should also be aware of
what type of longer term
market you are trading in: RSI targets need to be amended for
bull and bear markets.
What this says is while the usual
market factors surrounding OPEC
and inventories may affect sentiment, the other factors are the longs (
bulls) went short (
bears, resulting on «length liquidation»)
and commodity trading algorithms kicked in as prices fell («self - reinforced stop losses»
and «robots smelling blood in the water»).
To the article, thanks for explaining
bear and bull markets... I hear the terms
and never bothered to actually figure out
what they meant.
Following an 18 - year
Bull market,
and a three year
Bear market, we are now committed to
what looks like a long - term military obligation in Iraq.
In today's report, we will review
what that
bear super-cycle looks like for oil,
what forces are conspiring to keep oil prices range - bound for years to come,
and what would need to happen for a
bull market to begin.
HUI checks in with a view of the 2014
and 2015
bear market years along with
what may have been the first year of a new
bull market, 2016.
Online discount brokerages
Bull and bear stock
markets Investment real return MER — management expense ratio Transfer - in - cash Transfer - in - kind
What are hedge funds?
These longer cycles drive
what are called «secular»
bull and bear markets.
If this is the beginning of
what many consider a long overdue
bear market, we believe there is no better strategy than the DRS across a full
market cycle, both
bull and bear.
The key is not to be a
bear or
bull...
and read
what the
market is telling us.
What I also like was the quote about how to gradually move from 75 % equities to 25 % starting in mid career - taking money off the table when there was a
bull market and standing pat when there was a
bear market.
Butler Philbrick Gordillo
and Associates have an interesting post called
What the
Bull Giveth, the Bear Taketh Away on the duration and magnitude of all bull and bear market periods in U.S. stocks since 1
Bull Giveth, the
Bear Taketh Away on the duration and magnitude of all bull and bear market periods in U.S. stocks since 1
Bear Taketh Away on the duration
and magnitude of all
bull and bear market periods in U.S. stocks since 1
bull and bear market periods in U.S. stocks since 1
bear market periods in U.S. stocks since 1871.
Read
What the
Bull Giveth, the Bear Taketh Away for the bear market equivalents of the preceding bull table and ch
Bull Giveth, the
Bear Taketh Away for the bear market equivalents of the preceding bull table and ch
Bear Taketh Away for the
bear market equivalents of the preceding bull table and ch
bear market equivalents of the preceding
bull table and ch
bull table
and chart.
I made two quick runs with
Bull Bear Retirement Trainer B. Using
what I have learned about stock allocations
and valuations, I made it through 30 years OK withdrawing 5 % in today's (secular)
Bear Market.
This post is part 2 of last week's post about the duration
and magnitude of all
bull market periods in U.S. stocks since 1871, which used the S&P 500 price series from Shiller's publicly available database and the method adopted by Butler Philbrick Gordillo and Associates» post What the Bull Giveth, the Bear Taketh A
bull market periods in U.S. stocks since 1871, which used the S&P 500 price series from Shiller's publicly available database
and the method adopted by Butler Philbrick Gordillo
and Associates» post
What the
Bull Giveth, the Bear Taketh A
Bull Giveth, the
Bear Taketh Away.
Now onto the main topic, I often say I'm not sure
what to root for,
bear markets, when our portfolio
market values drop but we are able to sow the seeds for future gains; or
bull markets when bargains are hard to find, but we harvest earlier investments
and produce strong returns for clients
and Unitholders.
Of particular relevance,
what constitutes dangerous optimism in a
bear market will often not be a problem in a
bull market and what constitutes extreme fear / pessimism in a
bull market will often not signal a good buying opportunity in a
bear market.