GLOSSARY

market cycle

Clients tend to act on headlines, but headlines lag the market cycle by months. Stocks bottomed in August 1982, four months before the economy recovered. They bottomed again in December 1974, four months before economic conditions improved.

For advisors and RIAs who can read where the market cycle sits, this lag is the difference between keeping a client invested and watching them sell at the trough. Read on for the phases, the indicators that mark each one, and how each phase shapes portfolio decisions.

What is a market cycle?

A market cycle is the recurring pattern of rising and falling prices in financial markets, measured between two recent highs or lows of a benchmark like the S&P 500. It moves through four phases:

  • accumulation
  • markup
  • distribution
  • markdown

These stages are driven by economic conditions, monetary policy, and investor psychology.

The time horizon is what makes the term elastic. A trader scanning intraday charts and an advisor building a 30-year retirement plan are both watching market cycles, just on different scales. The shorter the window, the noisier the signal.

Most market cycles that matter to advisors run six to 12 months at the phase level. Federal Reserve policy can stretch or compress those phases well beyond that range. Historically, a sharp cut to interest rates has prolonged the upside for years. A tightening cycle, meanwhile, can end one early.

The broader market cycle plays out across years, rather than days or weeks. It also rarely announces itself in real time. Most cycles only become clear in retrospect, which is why even 20-year veterans hold cycle calls loosely.

The four phases of a market cycle

Every market cycle moves through four phases, in the same order, with sentiment and volume confirming each one. The labels come from technical-analysis tradition, but the dynamics are what every advisor will recognize from the past 30 years of US equities.

1. Accumulation phase

Accumulation begins after a market bottom. Innovators and early buyers re-enter the market while sentiment is still bearish and the headlines remain negative. Prices move sideways in a tight range. This phase can last months or years.

Institutional investors do most of the buying, scaling in at target prices to avoid pushing the market higher and raising their own cost basis. Retail participation stays low because nothing looks interesting on the chart. For long-term advisors, this is where positions get built and rebalances get done.

2. Markup phase

The markup phase begins when price breaks above the accumulation range on rising volume. New institutional and retail money rotates in, and the chart starts printing higher highs and higher lows.

The trend strengthens and can turn parabolic before it tops. This is the phase where stock market trends become obvious to everyone and clients call, asking why they aren’t more aggressive.

InvestmentNews sits down with Pitcairn’s Carlin Calcaterra for a 2026 market outlook and where the cycle may be heading next.

3. Distribution phase

Distribution is the topping stage for a stock, sector, or the broader market. Its hallmark is volume rising while price stalls. Bullish sentiment is at its peak, but the institutions that bought during accumulation are selling quietly into retail demand.

Chart patterns to watch include the head and shoulders top and the double top. A clean break below the 200-day moving average is the technical confirmation that distribution is done.

4. Markdown phase

Markdown is the decline. Buyers who got in late during distribution are underwater and start selling. With institutional players long gone, there are few new buyers to absorb the supply, and the drop tends to cascade.

The phase ends when a critical support level breaks on a volume spike, the last sellers are flushed out, and a new accumulation phase begins quietly.

For a look at the firms putting these phases to work across client portfolios, check out our special report on the top RIA firms in the US.

Market cycle vs. business cycle: why it matters for advisors

Market cycle and business cycle are linked, but they aren’t the same thing. Knowing which one you’re looking at changes the advice.

Business cycle tracks economic activity. Economists at the National Bureau of Economic Research (NBER) date its phases using GDP, employment, industrial production, and real income. The four phases run early cycle, mid-cycle, late cycle, and recession.

Market cycle, meanwhile, tracks equity prices. It moves through accumulation, markup, distribution, and markdown, and leads the business cycle rather than tracking it.

The lead-lag relationship in two recessions

Stock markets bottomed in December 1974, but the economy didn’t show signs of recovery until April 1975. The market called the turn roughly four months early. The pattern repeated in the early 1980s recession. Stocks bottomed in August 1982, with the economy following about four months later.

For advisors, this is the practical takeaway. Clients who wait for the headlines to confirm a recovery are reading a lagging indicator. By the time GDP confirms the economy has turned, the market has already moved.

For ongoing coverage of how the cycle is reshaping client portfolios, visit and bookmark our equities news section.

Market cycle indicators

No single signal calls a phase change. Advisors who read the market cycle well pull from three buckets: leading indicators, lagging indicators, and technical signals. The strongest cycle reads come when all three agree.

1. Leading indicators

Leading indicators move before the broader economy does. Three factors carry the most weight for cycle reading:

  • the stock market: equity prices are forward-looking and reflect expected future earnings, which is why the market often turns before the economy does
  • housing starts: new construction activity slows months before a contraction shows up in GDP, and picks up months before a recovery
  • consumer sentiment: confidence surveys from the Conference Board signal whether households are ready to spend or pull back

2. Lagging indicators

Lagging indicators confirm what’s already happened. They tell advisors where the cycle was, rather than where it’s going. These are:

  • unemployment rate: job losses peak well after a recession has begun
  • interest rates: Fed policy typically lags broader cycle moves, with rate cuts arriving once a slowdown is already underway
  • business spending: capital expenditure on equipment drops only after companies see demand fall

3. Technical signals

Technical signals show up on the chart before they show up in the data. The 200-day moving average and its crossovers, volume divergences, and chart patterns like head and shoulders, double tops, and double bottoms all flag phase transitions.

Rising market volatility often accompanies distribution and markdown, while compressed volatility tends to mark accumulation.

How the market cycle shapes portfolio decisions

Reading the market cycle isn’t a market-timing license. It’s a framework for tilting allocations and explaining drawdowns to clients in language they understand.

Different sectors lead in different phases:

  • Early-cycle accumulation: Cyclicals tend to outperform. Financials, consumer discretionary, industrials, and technology benefit from rising risk appetite and improving credit conditions
  • Mid-cycle markup: This is the longest and most evenly distributed phase. Sector leadership broadens and the gap between best- and worst-performing sectors narrows more than at any other point in the cycle
  • Late-cycle distribution: Leadership shifts. Energy, materials, and health care begin to outperform as growth slows. Consumer staples start to draw flows as investors brace for the next leg down
  • Recession-stage markdown: Defensives lead. Fidelity’s Asset Allocation Research Team has found that consumer staples have a perfect track record of outperforming the broader market through every recession phase, with utilities and health care also tending to outperform

The longer-term math favors staying engaged. Bull markets have significantly outperformed bear markets over time, based on FactSet and S&P Dow Jones Indices data through December 31, 2024.

InvestmentNews speaks with top advisors on where they’re finding growth, income, and resilience in the current cycle.

For a list of vetted planners who help clients position through every market cycle, see our best financial planners in the US special report.

Why timing the market cycle rarely works

Markets are forward-looking. Recoveries often begin before headlines turn positive, which is why clients waiting for an all-clear signal almost always miss the early move.

The cost of missing it is well-documented. Research from Wells Fargo Investment Institute found that the S&P 500 returned 8.4 percent annually over the 30 years from July 1, 1995 through June 30, 2025.

An investor who missed just the 30 best trading days saw that return drop to 2.1 percent, below the 2.5 percent average inflation rate over the same period. Missing the 40 best days dropped the return to 0.7 percent.

The advisor’s job isn’t to predict the next phase. It’s to keep clients invested through the cycle, adjust risk at the margins, and translate phase dynamics into language clients can act on.

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