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March 9, 2025 | It’s All About Buying Those Dips

Rick Ackerman

Rick Ackerman is the editor of Rick’s Picks, an online service geared to traders of stocks, options, index futures and commodities. His detailed trading strategies have appeared since the early 1990s in Black Box Forecasts, a newsletter he founded that originally was geared to professional option traders. Barron’s once labeled him an “intrepid trader” in a headline that alluded to his key role in solving a notorious pill-tampering case. He received a $200,000 reward when a conviction resulted, and the story was retold on TV’s FBI: The Untold Story. His professional background includes 12 years as a market maker in the pits of the Pacific Coast Exchange, three as an investigator with renowned San Francisco private eye Hal Lipset, seven as a reporter and newspaper editor, three as a columnist for the Sunday San Francisco Examiner, and two decades as a contributor to publications ranging from Barron’s to The Antiquarian Bookman to Fleet Street Letter and Utne Reader.

I’ve written here before about how the broad averages have struggled to go lower during what could turn out to be the initial phase of a bear market. Many traders, particularly greenhorns too young to have never experienced a bear market, appear to be buying each step of the way down. They could do so only if they were confident a rally lies just ahead. You can hardly blame them, since this has been more or less true for the last 16 years. The chart shows February’s selloff in graphic form. Notice the series of elongated bars over the last three weeks. Their steep, smooth fall resembles that of a parachute-drop rather than a crash landing. There is no trace of panic or even urgency in the decline, just hard selling that is being met minute-by-minute with serene buying, most of it occurring in the latter half of the day.

A Doge-y Economy

So far, the S&Ps have fallen 8% from the record highs they achieved near 6200 in December. That’s not even a stiff correction, let alone a bear market. But tariff talk and Doge layoffs have begun to unsettle the markets in ways that make a recession thinkable. A few retail analysts have even conceded there is a “small possibility” of a recession in 2025.  In Wall Street-speak that’s practically a siren alert telling investors to prepare for Armageddon.  But there is barely a hint of a downturn as yet, only two consecutive months of punk consumer spending. It is possible nonetheless to extrapolate a bearish scenario from the chart above. For starters, the S&P 500 will fall to the 5555 target shown. Then, they will rally with sufficient vigor to make tariff worries and the threat of a land war in Europe melt away, at least for a while. (Alternatively, the bounce could come from 5641.50, a proprietary ‘voodoo’ number.)

Although there is no reason to think that a minor mood change will push the broad averages to spectacular new highs, it’s no stretch to imagine the S&P mini-futures poking marginally above December’s record 6178. That would be enough to set the hook, goading bears into a short-covering riot while simultaneously convincing bulls that yet another moon shot is under way. Alternatively, a bear bounce could peter out well shy of the old top.  Either way, we’ll be ready.

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March 9th, 2025

Posted In: Rick's Picks

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