markets

bull

An investor who believes prices will rise and buys investments in anticipation of gains.

Example

She was bullish on renewable energy stocks and bought aggressively.

Memory Tip

A bull thrusts UP with its horns. A bull investor thinks prices are going UP.

Why It Matters

Understanding bull markets helps you recognize when economic conditions favor long-term investing and wealth building. Knowing whether you have a bull or bear market outlook influences your investment strategy and can significantly impact your financial goals over time.

Common Misconception

Many people think being a bull means you always make money in the stock market, but bulls can still lose money if they buy at the wrong time or choose poor investments. A bull market means prices are generally rising, but individual stocks or sectors can still decline.

In Practice

If you were bullish on technology stocks in 2020, you might have invested $10,000 expecting prices to rise. By 2021, your investment could have grown to $15,000 or more as the sector rallied. However, if you had bought at the peak in late 2021 and sold in 2022, you might have lost money despite being a bull.

Etymology

From the bull market analogy — a bull thrusts its horns upward.

Common Misspellings

boolbulbullishbuull
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Related Terms

bearbull market

More in markets

Other markets terms you should know

bear marketA market condition in which prices are falling or expected tbull marketA market condition characterized by rising prices and investdow jonesThe Dow Jones Industrial Average (DJIA), a stock market indemarket capitalizationThe total market value of a company's outstanding shares, canasdaqThe National Association of Securities Dealers Automated Quos&p 500Standard & Poor's 500 — a stock market index tracking the 50

See Also

optimismbuying
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