What Does Bullish vs Bearish Mean?
Not just definitions—what these signals mean for your actual decisions.
What you'll learn
- 1. The difference between bullish, bearish, and neutral bias
- 2. How we calculate bias (it's not a guess)
- 3. What to actually DO when you see each signal
The Three Bias Types
Bullish
What it means: The asset is trending up, with volume and momentum confirming the move. Buyers are in control.
How we calculate it: 2 of 3 indicators (trend, volume, strength) must agree on upward direction.
- • Look for entry points on pullbacks
- • Add to existing positions if risk allows
- • Set stop losses below recent support
Neutral
What it means: Indicators disagree. The market is undecided—could go either way.
How we calculate it: No clear majority among indicators. Mixed signals = no signal.
- • Wait for clarity before taking new positions
- • Hold existing positions with tighter stops
- • Focus on other assets with clearer signals
Bearish
What it means: The asset is trending down, with volume and momentum confirming the decline. Sellers are in control.
How we calculate it: 2 of 3 indicators must agree on downward direction.
- • Avoid new long positions
- • Consider taking profits on existing holdings
- • Wait for reversal signals before buying dips
Signal Strength
Not all signals are equal. We show modifiers when conviction is especially high or low:
Common Mistakes
Quick Reference
| Signal | Meaning | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Bullish ↗ | Trend up, confirmed | Look for entries |
| Neutral → | Mixed signals | Wait for clarity |
| Bearish ↘ | Trend down, confirmed | Avoid new longs |
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