| Basic Explanation | Understanding The Bull and Bear Market
α ααα»α ααααΆαααα
- ααΈααααΆαα‘αΎαααΎ α¬Bull Market ααΊααΎαα‘αΎααα α’αα‘α»αααααααααΆαααααΎαααααααα·α αα αα·αααΆαααΎαα‘αΎαααααααααα·αα·αααα αα·αα·αααα·αααΆααα»αα·αααα·αα·ααααααα ααααααΆααααΆαα αααααααα»αααΆααα·ααααα·α α¬ααααΆααααα
- ααΈααααΆαα α»αααααα α¬Bear Markets ααΊααΎαα‘αΎααα ααααααααΆαααΆαααααΆααα α»αααααααα α¬ααααααα·α αα ααΆααααΆαααααααααααΆααα»αα αααααΊααΆαααααααα·αα·αααα·αααΆααααααααα»αα α·ααααααα»αααΆααα·αα·ααα α αΎαααααΎααΆαααα ααΎααααΈαααααΆαααΆαααΆααααα
- ααΌα ααΆααααααααα·α αα ααΌα ααΆ ααα·ααααααα»ααααα»αααα»α(GDP) α’ααααΆα’αααααααΆαααΆαααΆαααααΎ αα·ααααααααααα’αΆααααααα¬αααα»αα α·ααααααααα·αα·αααα·α α’αΆα ααααΎα±αααα·αα·αααα·αααααααααααΈαα·ααα ααααααΈααααΆα α αΎααα½αααααα’αΆα ααααΎααΆαααααΆααααααΌααα ααΎαα»αααααΆαααααα±ααααΆαααααααααααααα
- αα·αα·αααα·αααΆαααΆαα’ααααααα αα·αααααα ααααααααααΆ ααΌα ααααα’αΆαααααα·αα·ααΆαααααα½αααα’αΆα αααααααα½ααααα»αα’αα‘α»ααααααΈααααΆαααΆαααααα
ααΈααααΆαα‘αΎαααΎ α¬Bull Market αα·αααΈααααΆαα α»αααααα α¬Bear Markets
ααΈααααΆαααΆααα·ααααΆααΆααααααααα½ααααΆαααΆαααα αα αααα’αΆα α‘αΎααα ααΎ α¬α α»ααα αααααα’αΆααααααα ααΆαααααΆαααΆαααααααα·α αα α ααα»ααααβααΎβααΎαβααΉαααΆααΈααααΆαααΆααα·ααα ααΆαααααααΆ?
ααΆααααααΉαα’αααΈααΈααααΆαα‘αΎαααΎ α¬Bull Market αα·αααΈααααΆαα α»αααααα α¬Bear Marketsα±ααααΆααααα αααΆααα’αΆα αα½ααααα’ααααααα»αααΆααα½αααΌαα±ααααΆααααααΆαααααα·αααααΆαα
αα·ααααα
ααΈααααΆαα‘αΎαααΎ α¬Bull Market
ααΈααααΆαααΆαααααΆααα·ααααΆααΆαααΎαα‘αΎα α¬αααααααΌαααααααΆαα½αααΎαα‘αΎαα ααα½α 20% α¬α αααΎαααΆαααααααα»ααααααααααΆαα αα ααΆααααΈααα ααΉαααααΌαααΆαααααααΆααααΆααΆ “ααΈααααΆαα‘αΎαααΎ α¬Bull Market “α αααα’αΆα αααααΆαααααΈαααααααααα’αΆαααααα α¬αααα»αα α·ααααααααα·αα·αααα·αααΆαααααα·αααααα αααααΊαα½αααααΏααΆααααΆααααΆαααΆαααααααα·α αα α’αΆα ααΉαααΎαα‘αΎαα
ααΈααααΆαα α»αααααα α¬Bear Markets
αααα»ααα αα·α ααααα·αααΎααΈααααΆαααΆααα·ααααΆααΆαα α»αααααααα·α α¬αααααααΌαααααααααΆααα α»αααΌα ααΈααααΆαααΆαααΎααα αααααΈααααΆααααααααΌαααΆαααααααΆααααΆ ααΈααααΆαα α»αααααα α¬Bear Marketsα ααααααααααααΈααααΆααα½ααααααΊ αα·αα·αααα·αααΆααα»αα·αααα·αα·αααα·α ααΆααα»α ααααααα·α αα α α»αααααα (α’αΆα ααΎαααΆααα·ααααα·ααααααα·α αα )α
ααΆααα’αααααα’αΆα ααααΎααααΆααααΆααα ααΎααΈααααΆαααΌα ααΆ ααΈααααΆαααΆαα αα»α ααΈααααΆαααΌααααααααα»α α’α αααααααα αα·αααΈααααΆαααΌαα·ααααααα’ααααααΆαα·ααΆααΎα (ααΌαα·αααααα αα·ααααα·α)α
ααΆαααααΎααααΆααααΌα ααΆααααααααα·α αα ααΎααααΈααΆαααΆααα ααΎααααΆαααΆαααΈααααΆα
-> ααΆααααααααααααΆαααΈααααΆαα‘αΎαααΎ α¬Bull Market αα·αααΈααααΆαα α»αααααα α¬Bear Markets
ααΈααααΆαα‘αΎαααΎ α¬Bull Market
- ααα·ααααααα»ααααα»αααα»αααααα
- α’ααααΆααααΆαααΆαααΆαααααΎααΆα
- ααΆαααΎαα‘αΎαααααααΆααα ααααααΆααΈααααα / ααααΎαααααΆααα αααΌα
- αααα»αα α·ααααα·αα·αααα·αααααΆαα (CCI & & BCI)
- αααααΌαααΆαααααΆαααα αααα»αααΈααααΆα (α§ααΆα ααα αα·ααααααααΆααααααΆα)
ααΈααααΆαα α»αααααα α¬Bear Markets
- ααα·ααααααα»ααααα»αααα»αααΆα
- α’ααααΆααααΆαααΆαααΆαααααΎααααα
- ααααΆααα ααααααΆααΈααααα / ααααΎαααααΆααα αααΌαααΆα
- αααα»αα α·ααααα·αα·αααα·αααααα (CCI & BCI)
- αααααΌαααΆαααααααα αααα»αααΈααααΆα (α§ααΆα ααα αα·ααααααααΆααααααΆα)
ααΎαα·αα·αααα·αααΉαααααΎα’αααΈ?
αα αααα»αα’αα‘α»αααααααααΈααααΆαααΆααααααα‘αΎα α¬Bull Market αα·αα·αααα·αααΆαα αααΎαααΆααα»αα·αααα·αα·αα αα·ααααα»αα α·αααααααααα ααΎααααΆαααΆαααααααα·α αα ααααα½ααααα·αααΆαα·ααααΆααΆααααα’αΆα ααΉαααααααΎαα‘αΎαα ααΌα αααα αα½αααα’αΆα ααΉααα·αααΆαα αα»α α¬αααααααααααααα·ααααααααα α αΎααα ααααααααΈααααΆαααααΆααα α»α αα·αα·αααα·αααΆααααααααα»αα α·αααααΆααααα αααΎααααα’αΆα α±αααα½ααααααα ααααΌαααααααααααααα½αα ααα½α ααΎααααΈαααααΆαααΆαααΆαααααααααααααα
αααααΆαααΆαααΆααααα αα·αααααα·αα·αααα·αααΆααα’αααα»αααααααΆαα₯αα·ααΆααααΌα ααααΆαα αααααΆααααα½αααα’αΆα αααααααΆαααΆαα½αααΉαα αΆαα·αααααααααααααΆ α αΎαααααα αα·αα·ααααααα»αααααΆαααα
ααααΉαααα·ααΆααααααααααα·ααΆαααααα αααααΆαααααα investopedia ααααΉαααα·ααΆαααααααααΈααααΆαα‘αΎαααΎ α¬Bull Market αα·αααΈααααΆαα α»αααααα α¬Bear MarketsααΆα αααΎααα½αααΆα αα αααα»αααααααααααααΆα 1920 ααΈααααΆαααααΆααα α»ααα αααααααααα»αααααΆα 1980 ααααΉαααα·ααΆααα dot-com bubble αα·ααα·ααααα·α α·ααααααααα»αααα»αααααΆα 2009 ααΆααΎαα
|English Version|
Key Takeaway:
- Bull markets are periods of economic growth and rising investment prices. Investors are optimistic and tend to buy.
- Bear markets are downturns with declining prices and economic weakness. Investors lose confidence and may sell to avoid losses.
- Economic indicators like GDP, unemployment, and investor confidence, investors can get a sense of which market is approaching and adjust their strategies accordingly.
- Investors have different risk tolerances and goals, so their behavior may vary during these market cycles.
Bull Market and Bear Market
The market tends to fluctuate rapidly, either going upward or downward depending on the economic condition. But how do we exactly know when or in which direction they are heading?
Understanding the two main forces at playβbulls and bearsβis your ticket to a smoother ride.
Definition
Bull Market: Upward trend
The market is heading an upward trend or pricing is rising by 20% or more within at least a two-month period, which is commonly known as βthe bull market”. This could be due to higher investor sentiment or higher confidence in economic and corporate performance (Peak, expansionary).
Bear Market: Downward trend
In contrast, the market is moving downward or pricing is declining in the same way, which is typically seen as a βbear market”. This can be characterized by less optimism about the market and a weakening economy (recession/toughness, contraction).
All of these can be applied to many markets, including the stock market, bond market, real estate, and forex market (currencies and commodities).
Using economic indicators to tackle the market
β> Comparison between Bull market and Bear Market
- Bull Market
- High Gross Domestic Product
- Low Unemployment
- Rise in Corporate profit/earning growth
- Strong Investor Confidence (CCI & BCI)
- Strong Demand in the market (Retail Sales for Instance)
- Bear Market
- Low Gross Domestic Product
- High Unemployment
- Low in Corporate profit/earning growth
- Weak Investor Confidence (CCI & BCI)
- Weak Demand in the Market (Retail Sales for Instance)
What would investors do?
During a bull market, an investor tends to be optimistic and confident that the upward trend will continue, so they would typically buy stocks or other assets. When a bear market hits, the investor loses more confidence, and panic/fear will cause them to sell their holding assets to avoid further losses.
However, not all investors behave the same, as they may deal with different risk tolerances and investment goals.
Historical Events:
According to an Investopedia source, several significant bull and bear markets include the Roaring Twenties in the 1920s, the Japanese bull market of the 1980s, the dot-com bubble, and the financial crisis in 2009.