Bear Market Anatomy

 | Apr 04, 2022 04:16PM ET

"Anatomy of a Bear Market" by Russell Napier is a "must-read" manuscript. Given current market dynamics, a review seems timely. As my colleague, Richard Rosso, CFP, previously penned:

"A mandatory study for every financial professional and investor who seeks to understand not only how damaging bear markets can be but also the traits which mark their bottoms.

"Every bear awakes from hibernation for different reasons. However, when studying the four great bottoms of bears in 1921, 1932, 1949, and 1982, there are several common traits to these horrendous cycles."

Not surprisingly, after 12-years of Fed interventions, seemingly impenetrable markets, and low yields, investors have become overly complacent. Such is despite repeated warnings to the contrary,

"Every financial crisis, market upheaval, major correction, recession, etc. all came from one thing – an exogenous, unanticipated, event.

"Such is why bear markets are always vicious, brutal, devastating, and fast. It is the exogenous event, usually credit-related, which sucks the liquidity out of the market causing prices to plunge.

"As prices fall, investors panic-sell driving prices lower. Such forces more selling in the market until, ultimately, it exhausts the sellers.

"It is the same every time.

"While investors insist the markets are currently NOT in a bubble, it would be wise to remember the same belief existed in 1999 and 2007.

"Throughout history, financial bubbles are only recognized in hindsight when their existence becomes ‘apparently obvious’ to everyone.

"Of course, by that point it was far too late to be of any use to investors and the subsequent destruction of invested capital.

"This time will not be different. Only the catalyst, magnitude, and duration will be.” – "No More Recessions," May 2019

Of course, just 10-months later, the market plunged by 35%.

However, therein lies the lessons from of the "Bear Market Anatomy" and Russell Napier.

Bears Tend To Die On Low Volume/h2

"Low volume represents a complete disinterest in stocks. Keep in mind this contradicts the tenet, which states that bears end with one act of massive capitulation – a downward cascade on great volume. Those actions tend to mark the beginning of a bear cycle, not the end.

"A rise in volume on rebounds, falling volumes on weakness would better mark a bottoming process in a bear market.”

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Using that analysis, we can see volume did pick up during the recent decline. However, volume is far below the 2020 "bear market bottom," suggesting investors remain complacent.