Investing.com | May 19, 2025 12:01PM ET
Traders are buying more call options, signaling growing confidence that stock prices will rise soon.
This optimism is backed by investors shifting billions from bond ETFs into stock ETFs following tariff cuts.
Such moves reflect a strategy of buying during dips, which history shows often leads to strong long-term gains.
Investor sentiment is clearly shifting, and two key signs show this change:
There are a few reasons for the optimism—mainly that the worst of the tariffs may be behind us, and Trump is expected to reach trade deals with several countries. But the two key reasons are:
The real winners are not the ones jumping in now. They are the patient investors who stayed calm during the storm.
When trade tensions flared up in early April, nearly $6.6 trillion was wiped off the US stock market in just two days—one of the worst two-day drops since the S&P 500 began in 1957. But some investors did not panic.
Instead, they stuck to what they had learned over the past 15 years: buy the dip. Six weeks later, the S&P 500 has not only recovered but has climbed about 17% from its lows, rising past the levels seen before the tariffs.
Retail investors have become a powerful force in the markets. By the end of 2024, they held $35 trillion in Wall Street stocks—about 38% of the market (according to data from the Federal Reserve and Goldman Sachs (NYSE:GS)). Their trading activity is strong, with volumes near record highs, second only to the meme stock surge of early 2021.
When markets dropped sharply in early April, retail investors acted quickly. At Charles Schwab (NYSE:SCHW), which has 37 million active securities accounts, clients made nearly 10 million trades per day in the first two weeks of April—a 36% jump from earlier in the year. The firm also saw a surge in new account openings.
Robinhood Markets (NASDAQ:HOOD) reported a similar spike. Its equity trading volumes reached four-year highs, and options activity neared record levels. Even as markets fell, its clients kept buying.
JPMorgan Chase (NYSE:JPM) said its clients invested $40 billion in stocks in April alone—an all-time high.
History shows that buying the dip has often worked well in financial markets. It is not always the case, but in most downturns, this strategy has paid off.
Staying invested through all that took real discipline.
The same idea applies to individual stocks. When we see the huge profits some stocks have made over 20–30 years, it’s easy to think those investors were just lucky. But they had to face many challenges along the way.
For example, Apple (NASDAQ:AAPL) gained over 8,300% in 29 years, but it also had sharp drops, including one close to 50%. Home Depot (NYSE:HD) saw its stock fall by 72%, and Nike (NYSE:NKE) faced a 70% plunge. Many other stocks have similar stories.
It’s important to remember that buying just because a stock or market has fallen a lot isn’t always smart. What looks cheap today might be expensive tomorrow. The key is to understand that market crashes happen regularly and are part of investing. Most of the time, the market rewards those who hold on and don’t panic. It’s also important to know why the crash happened—whether it’s an overreaction or due to real problems with the market or company.
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