1J·

Part 6 - Recognizing market phases: Build-up, acceleration, euphoria, top

Reading time: approx. 6 minutes

attachment

Many market movements only seem irrational because they are taken out of context. In retrospect, they usually follow a clear logic. Markets do not develop in a linear fashion, but in phases. These phases do not arise by chance, but from the interplay of expectations, capital flows and psychology. This is precisely where the phase model comes in, which has already been implicit in the previous articles and is now being consciously elaborated.


It is worth naming this model explicitly for the sake of classification. Markets typically move through four states:


Build-up phase: Fundamentals improve without prices reacting to this. Expectations are low, skepticism dominates.

Acceleration phase: figures, expectations and capital flows begin to work in the same direction. Price rises become more stable and more broadly based.

Euphoria phase: valuations rise faster than operational progress. Narratives gain weight over hard figures.

Top: Expectations are so high that even good news loses its impact and disappointments have a disproportionate effect.



This sequence is not a rigid pattern, but a robust orientation framework for better categorizing market reactions.


The underlying mechanism is simple. Markets do not react to absolute developments, but to changes relative to what is already expected. As soon as this expectation framework shifts, the price logic also changes, even if the facts remain objectively positive. This is precisely the reason for the patterns that can be observed time and again over the years and across markets.


At the beginning of a cycle, there are often initial fundamental improvements that receive little attention. Cost structures stabilize, excess supply is reduced and cash flows become more predictable. At the same time, sentiment is still strongly influenced by the past. Capital remains cautious, narratives defensive, prices barely react or continue to fall. This phase requires patience and conviction because it provides little confirmation. This is precisely why it is difficult to endure, although this is where the most asymmetrical opportunities arise.


As confirmation increases, the market begins to rethink. Fundamental progress is taken seriously, capital flows back, price rises become more stable. Setbacks lose their terror, trends become established. In this phase, value is created primarily through real improvements. Valuations are often not yet ambitious, although prices have already risen significantly. For many investors, this market phase feels the most rational because fundamentals and price performance are in harmony.


Later, the focus shifts. When a topic is widely accepted, narratives come to the fore. Growth is considered further, risks lose weight, valuation benchmarks are stretched. Price gains are increasingly generated through higher multiples rather than operational progress. This phase feels easy because successes are quickly confirmed. At the same time, the risk increases as expectations leave hardly any buffer.


The actual top is rarely a single moment. It is a state in which expectations are so high that even good news loses its impact. Price reactions become more erratic, volatility increases and small disappointments are punished harshly. Fundamentally, a lot can still be right, but the market demands more than can realistically be delivered. Anyone relying solely on the story here is confusing tailwinds with substance.


This phase model is not an instrument for precise timing. Its value lies in its classification. It helps you to adjust your own expectations to the current market logic and avoid typical mistakes, such as becoming euphoric too late or avoiding early phases out of impatience.


Just how tangible this model is can be seen particularly clearly in the uranium market.


After the Fukushima accident, uranium was a market without an audience for years. Prices were below production costs, mines were shut down and investments were frozen. At the same time, the supply side gradually began to tighten. Projects were postponed or abandoned, capacities disappeared permanently. Fundamental improvements were available, but were ignored. The market was still mentally trapped in the old picture.


During this phase, producers and developers improved their structures. Companies such as $CCO (+0,99 %) (Cameco) reduced costs and secured long-term purchase agreements. Developers such as $NXE (-0,23 %) (NexGen Energy) positioned projects for a future supply deficit. Nevertheless, prices hardly reacted. Setbacks dominated, positive news fizzled out. This is typical of early market phases in which facts run ahead of perception.


The picture changed with the reassessment of energy policy. Rising demand for electricity, geopolitical risks and the return of nuclear energy as a base load led the market to reconsider its assumptions. Uranium prices rose, projects became financeable again and capital returned. Price rises during this phase were mainly driven by fundamentals. Stocks such as $DML (-0,9 %) (Denison Mines) or $PDN (-2,16 %) (Paladin Energy) did not benefit from euphoria, but from a real shift in supply and demand.


In my opinion, the uranium market is currently still in the acceleration phase, albeit at an advanced stage. The central structural drivers are real and continue to be effective, and many price movements can still be explained fundamentally. At the same time, the key arguments are well known and increasingly priced in. Setbacks are still being bought, but more selectively, and the spread between qualitatively strong producers and purely narrative stocks is widening. This pattern argues against pronounced euphoria, but clearly shows that the risk/reward ratio has shifted compared to the early phases.


The uranium example illustrates why market phases are practically relevant. The same asset can be fundamentally convincing and yet represent a completely different investment depending on the phase. Those who ignore market phases often misinterpret price reactions. Those who classify them act more calmly and with more realistic expectations.


The next step is no longer about individual market phases within a stable framework, but about the moment when this framework itself tips. After all, not only markets but also strategies move in cycles. Phases in which growth dominates alternate with periods in which value or substance is in demand. Small and large caps, risk-on and risk-off also rotate. These changes rarely occur by chance, but usually follow changes in interest rates, liquidity and political intervention. Those who recognize them understand why previously successful approaches suddenly no longer work - and why the biggest misjudgments arise at precisely these points.

45
12 Commentaires

image de profil
Your best and most important episode so far. Should be required reading for every beginner in the stock market. 👍 👍 👍
‱
6
‱
image de profil
@Olli68 Thank you for the kind words
‱
1
‱
image de profil
Nice article! Thank you very much
‱
2
‱
image de profil
Saved as a bookmark Part 6 đŸ€
‱
2
‱
Very well written and explanatory; thank you very much for that. However, I wonder whether I can personally read the status of the phase in any way....
‱
1
‱
image de profil
@Gebsen79 Thank you for your comment and for the question. A few simple questions help me to get a feel for the phase. Are share prices still reacting clearly to good figures or is positive news increasingly fizzling out? Are setbacks bought quickly and widely or only very selectively? And what is actually being discussed: cash flows, costs and orders - or increasingly visions, market sizes and "long-term stories"? When these answers shift, you are usually no longer at the beginning of a cycle.
‱
1
‱
image de profil
Superbly written and illustrated. Thank you very much.

My assessment in this regard for the real estate market in Germany: Phase 1 with signs of entering phase 2. Anyone who can stand not being blathered at by the media: Now is a good time.
‱
1
‱
image de profil
@NichtRelevant Exciting idea! Do you have any interesting companies on your radar besides physical real estate?
‱
1
‱
image de profil
No, I am invested here exclusively in physical real estate and am currently trying to expand this even further due to the - in my opinion - favorable market phase, although I actually have far too many 'stones' in my portfolio.

I have never really looked at real estate companies, as my exposure in this area is far too high anyway due to my own properties.

However, I am currently observing exactly what you have described: After there was a real hype on real estate about 3-5 years ago and every local newspaper reported on investments in real estate, the tide has totally turned. Of course, the interest rates for financing changed upwards and it was clear to most 'new investors' that it was no longer worth it.

After 1 to 1.5 years of standstill or stagnation, however, other factors apart from interest rates have changed in the profitability calculation. We are seeing a significant improvement in purchasing levels, particularly in the area of apartment buildings. The m2 prices for these deals have fallen, rents are rising and there is no longer so much competition on the buyer side of the market. So you can negotiate with sellers again and find really good deals if you invest the appropriate time in searching and valuing properties.

The weekly articles about real estate investments have disappeared and if there are any, they are now about people who got into huge problems through real estate investments. If you can ignore the negative press and concentrate purely on the facts, there are now good opportunities again for a medium to long-term investment horizon. Of course, it's not really a gamble - the sector is too sluggish and cumbersome for that and the transaction costs are too high.
‱
1
‱
image de profil
@NichtRelevant Thank you for the exciting insight
‱
1
‱
image de profil
Very useful article. Thank you.
‱
1
‱
image de profil
Another excellent presentation. Especially that you mention uranium as an example has shown me that I am on the right track, as I put two shares in my portfolio some time ago and had to live with 10%-20% setbacks and am now up almost 30%.
I hope I will also successfully apply this knowledge in other sectors with the help of the community. đŸ‘đŸŒ
‱
1
‱
Participez Ă  la conversation