Clients hear the phrase “stock market trends” every day, but they rarely understand what it means for their portfolios. As an advisor, you can turn that vague buzzword into a clear, practical concept they can use.
In this glossary piece, we’ll go over what stock market trends are, how to identify them, and how to best explain these trends to clients.
Stock market trends describe the general direction that prices move over a period. A trend can go up, down, or sideways.
You spot a trend by looking at how a stock price or an index moves over days, weeks, months, or even years. When the direction holds for long enough to be meaningful, you have a trend. When the direction changes often and without follow‐through, you have noise.
For independent advisors and RIAs, trends are a simple way to frame market behavior for clients. They help explain why portfolios grow during one stretch, pull back during another, and go nowhere for a while. Trends also help set expectations for risk, return, and the likely range of outcomes in the short term and long term.
A few key points to remember about stock market trends:
There are three main types of trends in the stock market. You will use these terms often when speaking to clients:
An uptrend means prices make higher highs and higher lows over time. Buyers are in control. In an uptrend, the stock price or index tends to advance, pause, and then advance again. Clients will hear this called a bull market when the move is broad and lasts for months or years.
In a bull market, risk assets generally do well, credit spreads are often calm, and sentiment improves. Advisors still need to plan for pullbacks though.
A downtrend means prices make lower highs and lower lows over time. Sellers are in control. In a downtrend, rallies tend to fade, and new lows can follow.
A broad, long‐lasting downtrend is a bear market. During bear markets, clients feel more stress. Liquidity tightens and volatility rises. The role of the advisor is to keep clients anchored to their plan and to avoid panic‐driven buying or selling.

During economic downturns, asset safeguarding helps protect your clients' portfolios.
A sideways trend means prices move in a horizontal direction. Highs and lows are roughly the same over time. This range can last days, weeks, or months.
A sideways trend is like a pause in the market, when prices move within a range instead of clearly rising or falling. It often shows up while the market digests a big move or waits for new information. It can also come before a continuation of the old trend or a change in direction.
Advisors can identify trends with a few simple tools. Here are some of them:
Start with a clean price chart. Mark swing highs and swing lows. If each new peak is higher than the last and each pullback stops above the prior low, you are seeing higher highs and higher lows. That’s an uptrend. If peaks and pullbacks stair‐step downward, that’s a downtrend. If peaks and troughs line up around the same levels, you have a sideways trend.
Draw a line that connects rising lows in an uptrend or falling highs in a downtrend. This line helps you visualize the path and slope of the move. If the price breaks a trend line and fails to recover, it can be an early signal that momentum is shifting.
Moving averages smooth out daily noise. Common choices are the 50‐day and the 200‐day moving averages. When price stays above a rising 200‐day average, the long‐term trend is generally up. When price stays below a falling 200‐day average, the long‐term trend is generally down.
Crossovers can add context. A golden cross happens when the 50‐day moves above the 200‐day and can signal improving momentum. A death cross is the opposite and can signal weakening momentum.
A stock can be in a long‐term uptrend but also in a short‐term correction. For portfolio work, prioritize the timeframe that matches the client’s plan. Use short‐term trends to fine‐tune entries and risk controls, not to overhaul long‐term strategy.
Fundamental analysis looks at the key forces that drive markets. These factors help shape market trends:
If fundamentals and price agree, it’s more likely that a stock market trend is forming.
Market sentiment is how investors feel about the market. You can get a sense of it from surveys, options trading, and where money is flowing in or out of funds. Use sentiment as a cross‐check alongside price charts and fundamentals.
The best trend work is simple, repeatable, and easy to explain. To help your clients understand concepts related to stock market trends, you could:
Let’s go over these points:
Use everyday words and concepts that clients understand. You might be tempted to use jargon to impress your clients; resist the urge and use plain language for their benefit. You can use easy-to-understand phrases like:
Simple language leads to a better understanding of important concepts in investing. This makes your clients feel more empowered in making financial decisions. Take a cue from Michael Bisaro, president and CEO of StraightLine, who explains how to make financial literacy less intimidating for clients:
Find out more about Bisaro and other top advisors in the Hot List 2025 special report.
One clean chart is better than a page of text. Use a price chart with two moving averages and a couple of trend lines. Mark higher highs and higher lows with small notes. Keep colors and lines simple. Clients should be able to follow the story in 30 seconds.
A key skill is the ability to distinguish long-term trends from market noise. Find out more about four signals that the US is going into an extended bull market.
Tie each trend description to a portfolio implication. For example, you could say: “The long‐term trend is down. We are focusing on quality, liquidity, and risk control.” When you link market behavior to clear actions like this, clients see how your decisions fit their plan. That helps them stay calmer and more confident in the investing process.
Be upfront that trends change; they’re not a guarantee of how the market will behave. The goal is not to predict every turn; it’s to manage risk, compound over time, and avoid large, permanent losses.
Share a short, regular trend check with clients. The frequency may vary depending on their needs and market exposure. Over time, clients will learn the language and feel more confident.
Here’s a summary of the key phrases we mentioned in this piece. Come back to this section any time by clicking on the jump link in the table of contents at the top of this article.
For other key terms and concepts in financial planning and investing, read and bookmark our glossary section. This can be an easy page to share with clients to help them up their knowledge of the market!
For independent advisors and RIAs, stock market trends are a practical way to explain what is happening, not a tool to predict how the market will behave. You can identify trends by watching price movement, using tools like trend lines and moving averages, and confirming them with basic fundamental analysis.
When you talk with clients about stock market trends, keep the process simple:
When you frame stock market trends this way, they become both a teaching tool and a risk management tool. That’s the real value for your practice: fewer surprises, more informed clients, and steadier decision‐making.
They're willing to pay a little extra for it, too.
Periodic market setbacks are inevitable, but the long-term case for equities remains sound
Appointment of Arthur P. Steinmetz is in some ways an experiment — perhaps even a risky one.
An in-depth look at managed futures, which can be a confusing asset class for investors and advisers alike.
The best stocks this month, like Netflix, Tesla and TripAdvisor, which are all up more than 16% in the past four weeks, were the market's biggest losers just a few months ago. What gives?
Fund flows contain useful information that advisers can use to gauge the popularity of different trading strategies and identify changes in market focus.
Fund performance sagged as assets ballooned and performance sagged – but the manager says his bad bets were the culprit.
The most hated stocks are proving to be the best performers, knocking money managers for a loop, with more than 80% of growth and value funds trailing their benchmarks. Remember the old adage about past performance? It's true.
Today: What to expect from Davos ... but remember how Davos big-thinkers whiffed last year. Also: Time to worry about deflation again, hedge funds go for the gold, a Super Bowl market indicator, and Happy MLK Day.
The demise of a noted research organization makes the job a bit harder.
The fact is, mutual funds come and go. And they come and go often, which is a reality that financial advisers should not only be aware of, but should be watching for lest their clients are left holding the bag of heavy tax and transaction consequences.
Important to keep a close eye out for closings and mergers, lest you are left holding the bag
With D.C. debate in rearview mirror, investors can focus on earnings, economy and the Fed, strategist says.
Survey finds people still spooked by 2008 - 'the enemy they know' - as cash value erodes
Here's the criteria advisers should consider when determining whether actively managed or index funds are right for their clients. Think investor objectives, fund liquidity, safety, guarantees.