Anatomy of the Beginning of a Bull Market for Stocks

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by S. Wade Hansen

Signs that the Bull Market has Returned

Trying to identify when a bear market has ended and a new bull market has taken its place can be maddening. Fortunately, there are a few sign posts along the way that you can watch for to confirm that a new bull market has begun.

According to Money magazine, the following events typically take place shortly after a new bull market has begun:

- Consumer confidence finds a bottom

- The recession ends

- Corporations see a recovery in their profits

- The end of the recession is officially announced

Of course, identifying these sign posts won't allow you to go back in time and put all of your money into the market at the beginning of the bull market, but knowing when the bear market has ended can help you in your transition back into the stock market. Anatomy of the Beginning of a Bull Market for Stocks

Consumer Confidence Finds a Bottom

One of the first things that typically happens once the stock market finds a bottom and begins to rebound is consumer confidence finds a bottom.

Now, finding a bottom usually means hitting a new low---which means we often see the stock market find a bottom before all of the bad news from consumers is out.

Learn more about the Consumer Confidence Survey.

Recession Ends

Because the stock market is always looking forward, the bottom of the stock market tends to come before the end of the recession. On average, recessions tend to end three to four months after the stock market has found a bottom---which was March 9, 2009 on the S&P 500, if we truly are in a new bull market.


Learn more about why we look at the S&P 500 and don't think the Dow Jones Industrial Average is the best market index.

Corporations See Recovery in Profits


It seems odd that stock prices, which are theoretically based on corporate profits, would begin to rise before seeing a rise in corporate profits, but as we mentioned above, the stock market is always looking forward.

If stock investors see an increase in earnings on the horizon, they will try to be the first in line to buy the stock before everyone piles in an pushes the price of the stock higher. This typically happens seven months into a new bull market.

Learn more about how you can conduct a Fundamental Analysis on a Stock the Easy Way.

End of the Recession is Officially Announced

One of the last road signs you should be looking for to confirm that a bull market has begun is the official announcement that the recession is over.

Once you hear this announcement, you have most likely missed up to one-third of the total upward movement the bull market will enjoy.

Of course, catching two-thirds of a bull market can make you a lot of money, but being too conservative and waiting for the official announcement from the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) that the recession is over can cost you additional profits.

Learn more about the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) and how they Define a Recession.

NEXT: Learn more about The Five "Secret" Indicators You Can Use to Spot the Bottom of the Market.


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Comments Add New
dee  - Anatomy of the Beginning of a Bull Market for Stoc   |2009-06-30 01:52:39
You analysis is useless.
swadehansen  - Sorry You Missed It   |2009-06-30 03:35:16
Dee, sorry you missed the point I was trying to make in the article and video. I
was not trying to give you an exact moment and foolproof way to know the market
had turned around. I was trying to point out the things that typically happen
after the bottom has formed so that you can take that into account as you
conduct your analysis. Many investors get nervous about putting their money back
into the stock market after a huge crash like we've had, and I hope this makes
it easier to gain some empirical confidence in what they are seeing so they can
get their money growing again. Sure, you may miss the fist part of the bull run,
but if you catch the majority of it, you are much better off than if you don't
catch any of it.
Ati  - green light for bulls   |2009-06-30 20:10:07
I think these signs make sense indeed. clearly, any recession cannot end unless
demand increases. Demand increase can happen when consumers start spending. so
consumer confidence will be a preceding sign. I also believe oil price -but not
gold- gives a idea about bull market as oil price increases when the demand
increases.
Inspector Clouseau  - Bull or Dead Cat Bounce?   |2009-07-01 12:46:57
Wade - interesting thoughts and ideas. But one of the problems of course is the
dreaded Dead Cat Bounce. The rub with the guideposts (such as consumer
confidence hiting bottom)is that they'll look the same for a recovery as they
will for a dead cat bounce. Only a Ouija board can really tell the
differance.

Keep the video's coming - they're great!
bluestealth2003  - No Bull Market   |2009-07-02 11:36:55
We are not entering a bull market but we are starting to see the end of this
bear market rally. How reliable is consumer confidence when consumers are
always the last to know the moves of the market? Maybe the consumer confidence
is improving because the media is pushing a false sense of a recovery with the
so-called "green shoots." Oil has increased because the dollar has
decreased, not because demand is there. Wait until second quarter earnings come
out, especially for banks. Then watch as California defaults. Then talk of a
bull market will be over and the bearish trend will be on again. I believe we
are headed for an inflationary depression. I also believe the correlation when
the market goes down and the dollar goes up will end when people realize that
the government has devalued the dollar so much that it isn't a safe haven
anymore. Gold and silver should take the dollar's place as the safe haven.
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