A dead cat bounce? Six market terms to know in an era of trade wars
A bear market is a term used by Wall Street when an index such as the S&P 500 or the Dow Jones Industrial Average has fallen 20% or more from a recent high for a sustained period of time.
Why use a bear to refer to a market slump? Bears hibernate, so they represent a stock market in retreat. In contrast, Wall Street's nickname for a surging market is a bull market, because bulls charge.
When stocks rebound briefly in a moment of free fall or uncertainty, it's known as a 'dead cat bounce'. That's linked to the idea that even a dead cat will bounce when it falls from a great enough height. The market recovery tends to be temporary and brief, and the downturn tends to resume.
Capitulation refers to the point when investors give up on the idea of recouping their losses and sell, often out of fear and intolerance of falling prices. This tends to happen during times of low confidence, high uncertainty and volatility.
Capitulation can sometimes indicate the bottom of a market, but it's easier to identify in retrospect.
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European markets eye historic rally following Trump's tariff pause
Why are US Treasury bonds losing their safe-haven status in dramatic sell-off?
A recession is a time when the economy shrinks and unemployment rises.
Recessions are officially declared by the National Bureau of Economic Research, a group of economists who consider factors such as hiring trends, income levels, spending, retail sales and factory output. The bureau's Business Cycle Dating Committee defines a recession as 'a significant decline in economic activity that is spread across the economy and lasts more than a few months'.
The organisation typically does not declare a recession until well after one has begun, sometimes as long as a year later.
In the days before Trump's most recent tariffs took effect, economists at Goldman Sachs raised their assessment of the odds the US will experience a recession from 35% to as high as 65%. Analysts rescinded that forecast on Wednesday after his administration announced a 90-day pause on most of the levies.
'Buying the dip' refers to purchasing a stock or buying into the market right after it has lost value, at a discount. The phrase is commonly used by retail investors. Unfortunately, it's all but impossible to time the market, to know where the bottom will be, or how long a recovery will take.
The 10-year Treasury bond yield is the interest rate the US government pays to borrow money for a decade. It's a key indicator of investor sentiment and economic conditions, and it helps set prices for all kinds of other loans and investments. The yield influences borrowing costs and signals expectations about inflation and economic growth.
Historically, Treasury bonds are considered one of the world's safest assets. That means investors often buy them when there's uncertainty in the market, which tends to lower the yield. Prices for the 10-year bonds tend to fall when confidence is high (and people buy assets perceived as riskier), which causes yields to rise.
In recent days, however, investors have sold Treasury bonds, which sent the benchmark 10-year yield up. That could point to a lack of consumer confidence in Treasury bonds themselves.
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