
The Right “Bullish or Bearish” Question
The strong bull market of the past few years has “trained” many people to just keep buying the dips. As a whole, that’s been a pretty good play. But when do you NOT want to buy the dip?
At a young age, Ross Givens discovered his passion for trading. He purchased 100 shares of Microsoft stock when he was 12 years old. After getting a degree in Finance, he became a financial advisor, broker, and professional money manager in short order.
Prior to his role as a vice president of a major investment bank, he held various licenses and certificates issued by the Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA).
Ross follows the money with investing.
He has invested a lot of time and effort to investigate volume patterns to forecast upcoming stock movements in microcap stocks.
Ross is widely considered to be the foremost authority on insider trading. His proprietary system focuses on identifying high-probability investment opportunities by using transactions involving business insiders.
He has appeared on CNBC, Fox Business, and Bloomberg among others.

The strong bull market of the past few years has “trained” many people to just keep buying the dips. As a whole, that’s been a pretty good play. But when do you NOT want to buy the dip?

The strong bull market of the past few years has “trained” many people to just keep buying the dips. As a whole, that’s been a pretty good play. But when do you NOT want to buy the dip?

It’s the last week of what has been a very choppy, sideways February for the broader markets. I don’t expect that to change this week. But when we “slice” the market a bit more, a different picture emerges.

It’s the last week of what has been a very choppy, sideways February for the broader markets. I don’t expect that to change this week. But when we “slice” the market a bit more, a different picture emerges.

The market today isn’t the same as the AI-driven bull market of 2023–2024 (or even 2025). As I’ve been saying, we’re seeing a massive rotation in a “dispersed” market. To top all that off – as today’s chart shows – uncertainty is also at all-time highs.

Yesterday I talked about the dispersion we’re seeing in the markets, about how we’re seeing a sharp rise in BOTH winners and losers. Today’s chart shows just how stark that theme really is.