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How to Remember What 'Bear' and 'Bull' Market Mean

How to Remember What 'Bear' and 'Bull' Market Mean
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I like to think that I know a fair bit about investing, but every time I hear someone say “bear market” or “bull market,” I have to double-check what they actually mean. (Is the bear the one where stocks are dropping, or is that the bull?)

So if you read the news this morning and saw that we were entering our first bear market since 2009—and then asked yourself whether that was good or bad news—here are three quick mental tricks to help you tell your bulls and bears apart.

Bulls fight upwards and bears fight downwards

As Ian Salisbury explains at Money.com, bulls fight by stabbing up and bears fight by slashing down:

In stock market lore, there are two types of market: bull and bear. Supposedly the terminology developed to reflect that fact that a bull fights by thrusting upwards with its horns, while a bear fights by thrusting downwards with its claws.

I have never been in either a bear or a bull fight, so I cannot attest to the veracity of this claim.

Bulls toss enemies in the air and bears throw them in the dirt

If you like your metaphors slightly more graphic, here’s one from Alex Planes at The Motley Fool:

A bull might be known for thrusting its enemies upward, but a bear prefers to knock foes into the dirt.

Once again, I have not experienced this bear/bull behavior in person—but I am well aware that “bears knocking foes into dirt” is a thing, thanks to that Leonardo DiCaprio movie.

Bulls charge forward and bears hibernate

If you want a mental hack that’s a little less violent, Melanie Pinola offered this analogy for Lifehacker readers back in 2015:

In a bullish market, everything’s moving forward: investors are confident making a lot of buys, more companies are entering the stock market, and more money is being invested in the stock market overall (technically, a bull market means the market has

risen in value by at least 20%

). In a bear market, investors pull back (like bears hibernating). Prices start to hover and go down, and people wait and see more before investing additional money in stocks and bonds.

I think bears also charge forward (remember, I am familiar with The Revenant), but since bulls definitely don’t hibernate, this one also works? Maybe?

If you have other suggestions on how to remember which one is the bear market and which one is the bull market, let us know—because I don’t think any of us really want to keep looking it up on our phones every time the market changes.