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

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

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.
Total: $100,000
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.
A common quick stress test assumes:
| 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%)
Assume:
| 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%)
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% |
If you want a deeper stress test, I can generate a mini matrix like this:
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