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Major indices can mask underlying weakness. By the time a major negative event makes news, a significant portion of the market (like 50% of the Russell 3000) may have already been in a correction for months, signaling the downturn is more advanced than it appears.
A key warning sign of a market top is low correlation, where different indices (e.g., NASDAQ, S&P 500, Russell 2000) peak at separate times. This indicates that capital is rotating from exhausted leaders to laggards in a final, desperate search for returns. When this rotation ends, the next likely move is a broad, correlated decline.
Corrections often smolder under the surface, but a true bottom isn't reached until a major, headline-grabbing event causes even the highest-quality stocks and indices to sell off sharply. This 'capitulation' signals the final phase of the downturn is at hand.
Contrary to the common belief that the equity market correction started in February, the downturn actually originated last fall. It was driven by tightening financial liquidity, which first impacted the most speculative assets like cryptocurrencies and high-growth stocks.
Contrary to popular belief, the 1929 crash wasn't an instantaneous event. It took a full year for public confidence to erode and for the new reality to set in. This illustrates that markets can absorb financial shocks, but they cannot withstand a sustained, spiraling loss of confidence.
Current market bullishness is at levels seen only a few times in the past decade. Two of those instances led to corrections within three months. This euphoria, combined with low volatility and high leverage, makes the market vulnerable to even minor negative news.
A key sign of a market bottom is when the sell-off expands beyond speculative assets and significantly impacts the 'best stocks' and major indices. This final phase of capitulation is often triggered by a major external shock, like a war, indicating the correction is nearly complete.
Unlike market tops which form over extended periods, market bottoms often occur rapidly after a final capitulation event. Investors should anticipate this speed and be ready to deploy capital during periods of peak negative sentiment, as the recovery can begin just as quickly.
Weakness in speculative, low-quality stocks and assets like Bitcoin often marks the beginning of a market correction. The final phase, however, is typically characterized by the decline of high-quality market leaders (the “generals”). This sequential weakness is a historical indicator that the correction is closer to its end than its beginning.
The economy is now driven by high-income earners whose spending fluctuates with the stock market. Unlike historical recessions, a significant market downturn is now a prerequisite for a broader economic recession, as equities must fall to curtail spending from this key demographic.
Large, negative revisions to economic data often occur around major economic turning points. This is because companies hit first by a downturn are more likely to delay reporting their data, which makes the initial economic reports appear stronger than reality.