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A few months ago, I started paying closer attention to something I had never really studied before. Why do some articles pull you in immediately while others lose you halfway through? Why do some writers turn casual readers into subscribers? Why do certain stories stay in your head days later? I wasn't researching this for a job. I wasn't building an editing business. I was just curious. So I started reading differently. I paid attention to opening lines. I watched where my attention drifted. I noticed the moments that made me keep scrolling and the moments that made me close the tab. Over time, I filled notebooks with observations. Some articles had great ideas buried under weak introductions. Some were well-written but never gave readers a reason to care. Others had rough grammar and awkward sentences, yet somehow kept me reading until the end because the story was strong. The more I studied writing, the more I realized something. Most writers rarely get honest feedback...

If the Market Drops 10–20%: Here’s What Happens to My $100K SPY/QQQ/Bonds Portfolio

I’ve learned the hard way that markets don’t “announce” a bearish phase with one headline. What they do is quietly change behavior: rallies get weaker, leadership narrows, volatility starts acting different, and suddenly the dip-buying muscle memory stops working.

So instead of guessing, I use a checklist. If enough boxes flip from green to yellow (and yellow to red), I stop thinking in “new highs soon” terms and start thinking in “capital preservation” terms.


Step 1: I define what “bearish phase” actually means (for me)

For me, a bearish phase isn’t only the textbook “down 20% = bear market.” That’s a headline definition that usually arrives late. What I care about is whether the market enters a regime where:

  • Uptrends break and fail to recover quickly
  • Risk appetite fades (growth and small caps struggle)
  • Volatility becomes sticky (fear doesn’t fade fast)

In other words: I’m not waiting for the label. I’m watching for the behaviour.

Step 2: I watch the “market engine”: breadth (because it breaks before the index does)

When SPY looks “fine” but fewer stocks are participating, I treat that as an early warning. It’s like seeing the car still moving while the engine starts misfiring.

This is why I pay attention to breadth-oriented commentary and chart sets that focus on participation and internals (not just the index print). StockCharts’ “breadth matters” framing is a good reminder that tops often form when participation fades. [Source](https://articles.stockcharts.com/article/5-charts-that-will-define-markets-in-2026/)

What I do with this: If breadth deteriorates, I tighten risk even if SPY hasn’t “officially” broken down yet.


Step 3: I treat $QQQ / $NDX as the stress test (because tech leadership can hide fragility)

The Nasdaq 100 can look stable while internals weaken underneath—especially when a small set of mega caps props up performance. That’s why I like reading “internal fragility” analysis around NDX/QQQ, even when price hasn’t collapsed yet. [Source](https://www.investing.com/analysis/nasdaq-100-stability-masks-growing-internal-market-fragility-200674239)

If QQQ starts breaking trend structure and fails to reclaim it quickly, I assume the market’s “risk-on” heartbeat is fading.


Step 4: I check if the rally is being carried by a few names (AAPL, NVDA, MSFT, TSLA, META, GOOGL)

When the “Magnificent Seven” narrative dominates, I ask myself a blunt question: Is the index rising because the market is healthy… or because a few giants are heavy?

If leadership narrows too much, I avoid overconfident conclusions from SPY/NDX alone and start looking for confirmation elsewhere (small caps, equal-weight indexes, cyclicals, credit spreads).

For context on how investors are thinking about the Mag 7 going into 2026 (and the risk of concentration/rotation), Yahoo Finance has ongoing coverage. [Source](https://finance.yahoo.com/news/magnificent-7-2026-investors-expect-151805984.html)


Step 5: I use the [VIX](https://www.investopedia.com/terms/v/vix.asp) as my “fear temperature” (not a crystal ball)

I don’t use the VIX to predict direction. I use it to measure whether fear is becoming persistent. The VIX is designed to reflect the market’s expectation of near-term volatility—basically what options traders are pricing in. [Source](https://www.investopedia.com/terms/v/vix.asp)

If volatility spikes and then quickly collapses, dips tend to be buyable. If volatility spikes and stays elevated, that’s when I stop being cute with risk.

Step 6: I separate “macro noise” from “macro damage”

A bearish phase usually needs fuel: growth scares, sticky inflation, rates staying higher for longer, or an earnings reset. I keep an eye on major market commentary and “line in the sand” discussions because breaks of widely watched levels can change positioning fast. [Source](https://www.morningstar.com/news/marketwatch/20260205496/bulls-facing-a-make-or-break-moment-as-the-sp-500-nears-a-line-in-the-sand)

I also glance at sentiment dashboards like CNN’s Fear & Greed Index as a quick temperature check (I never trade off it alone, but it helps frame the crowd’s mood). [Source](https://www.cnn.com/markets/fear-and-greed)


My “if/then” playbook (what I’m actually doing)

  • If SPY is holding up but breadth is failing: I reduce exposure and avoid chasing breakouts.
  • If QQQ/NDX loses leadership: I assume risk appetite is fading and I tighten stops.
  • If VIX stays elevated: I trade smaller, hold more cash, and stop averaging down blindly.
  • If the market becomes headline-driven: I focus on weekly closes rather than intraday drama.

And yes—sometimes my best trade is doing nothing. In a developing bearish regime, overtrading is usually the tax I pay for boredom.


Optional video (to learn VIX quickly)

If you want a quick explainer I like for understanding VIX mechanics:

How to use the VIX index EXPLAINED with Strategy
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IU8ejxUgCVg


My closing question (because this is the real tell)

If I asked you to pick just one: what are you watching right now to confirm “bearish phase” — breadth, VIX, QQQ leadership, or something else?

If you tell me your time horizon (day trading vs. swing vs. long-term investing), I’ll tailor the checklist into a tighter, personalised playbook for $SPY / $QQQ / $DIA specifically.

Portfolio stress-test tracker (sample $100,000): 60% SPY, 20% QQQ, 20% bonds

Below is a simple, reusable stress-test tracker you can copy into a note, Google Sheet, or Excel. I’ll show the math, then give you a scenario table for 10% and 20% correction outcomes.

Starting allocation

Total: $100,000

  • SPY (60%): $60,000
  • QQQ (20%): $20,000
  • Bonds (20%): $20,000


1) Stress-test formula (the tracker logic)

For each sleeve:

New Value = Starting Value × (1 + Return%)
Dollar P/L = New Value − Starting Value
Portfolio Return = (Total New Value / $100,000) − 1

You can run any scenario by plugging in assumed returns for SPY, QQQ, and bonds.


2) Scenario A — “Market correction -10%” (base case assumptions)

A common quick stress test assumes:

  • SPY: -10%
  • QQQ: -12% (tech often drops more than broad market in risk-off)
  • Bonds: +2% (flight-to-safety / rates down scenario)

Results

Asset Start Assumed return End value Dollar P/L
SPY $60,000 -10% $54,000 -$6,000
QQQ $20,000 -12% $17,600 -$2,400
Bonds $20,000 +2% $20,400 +$400
Total $100,000 $92,000 -$8,000

Portfolio outcome: -$8,000 (-8.0%)


3) Scenario B — “Market correction -20%” (base case assumptions)

Assume:

  • SPY: -20%
  • QQQ: -25%
  • Bonds: +4%

Results

Asset Start Assumed return End value Dollar P/L
SPY $60,000 -20% $48,000 -$12,000
QQQ $20,000 -25% $15,000 -$5,000
Bonds $20,000 +4% $20,800 +$800
Total $100,000 $83,800 -$16,200

Portfolio outcome: -$16,200 (-16.2%)


4) “Tracker-style” quick table (plug-and-play)

Here’s a compact tracker you can reuse by just changing the return assumptions:

Scenario SPY return QQQ return Bonds return Portfolio end value Portfolio P/L Portfolio %
10% correction -10% -12% +2% $92,000 -$8,000 -8.0%
20% correction -20% -25% +4% $83,800 -$16,200 -16.2%


5) What to stress-test next (to make this more realistic)

If you want a deeper stress test, I can generate a mini matrix like this:

  • Bonds +4% / +2% / 0% / -2% (rates up vs down)
  • QQQ sensitivity: SPY -10% → QQQ -10% / -12% / -15%
  • Add a “rebalancing rule” (e.g., rebalance back to 60/20/20 after a 10% move)


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