More traders turn bullish in first quarter even as market shows signs of fatigue, Schwab survey says

More traders turn bullish in first quarter even as market shows signs of fatigue, Schwab survey says


Traders work on the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) floor on Feb. 20, 2025 in New York City.
Spencer Platt | Getty Images

An expensive stock market didn’t prevent traders from getting more bullish as investors increasingly bet that the bull run could keep chugging along, according to Charles Schwab’s new quarterly client survey.

The bulls continue to outnumber the bears among traders by 51% to 34%, said Schwab’s survey, which polled 1,040 active traders last month. Young traders under the age of 40 especially showed a spike in optimism, with bullishness jumping to 59%. That compares to 47% in the fourth quarter. The positive sentiment came even as two-thirds of the traders believe the market is overvalued, the survey said.

“It’s clear that the majority of traders believe there’s some froth in the market but on balance they also feel like there’s still more room for the bulls to run,” said James Kostulias, head of trading services at Charles Schwab. “More than half of traders plan to move additional money into stocks in Q1.”

While bullishness indicates positive views on the market, it can also be seen as a contrary indicator when there are signs of excess.

Stock Chart IconStock chart icon

hide content
S&P 500

After a booming two-year period in which the S&P 500 climbed more than 50%, the momentum has slowed as of late with rising concerns about an economic slowdown and heightened volatility from rapid policy changes from the new administration. The equity benchmark is only up 1.3% on the year, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite has dipped into negative territory for 2025.

In terms of sectors, traders are most bullish on energy, tech, finance and utilities. These sectors are typically beneficiaries under the Trump administration due to potential deregulation.

The survey also detected a significant drop in the number of traders who believe a recession will occur in the U.S. — only a third of the respondents called it “somewhat likely,” compared to 54% in the prior quarter.

The majority of traders also didn’t see a reacceleration in inflation, with two-thirds of them seeing price pressures holding steady.



Source

JPMorgan Chase reins in lending to private credit firms after marking down software loans
Finance

JPMorgan Chase reins in lending to private credit firms after marking down software loans

Key Points JPMorgan is marking down collateral held by private credit firms and reducing their borrowing capacity — a preemptive move driven by market valuations, not actual loan losses. The markdowns target software company loans, where AI advances have sparked fears of disintermediation, triggering a private credit downcycle and abnormally high redemptions at firms like […]

Read More
Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Oracle, AeroVironment, Nike and more
Finance

Stocks making the biggest moves premarket: Oracle, AeroVironment, Nike and more

Check out the companies making headlines before the bell. Oracle — Oracle shares jumped more than 9% after the cloud infrastructure company gave strong fiscal third quarter results and lifted its revenue guidance for fiscal 2027. Management lifted its fiscal 2027 revenue outlook up $1 billion to $90 billion. Analysts polled by LSEG sought $86.6 […]

Read More
Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Rivian, Hims & Hers, BioNTech, Vertex Pharmaceuticals & more
Finance

Stocks making the biggest moves midday: Rivian, Hims & Hers, BioNTech, Vertex Pharmaceuticals & more

Check out some of the companies making the biggest moves midday: Hims & Hers Health — Shares of the telehealth company jumped 3%. Bank of America upgraded the stock to neutral from underperform after Novo Nordisk dropped its patent infringement case against Hims, and the companies agreed that Hims would sell Novo’s Ozempic and Wegovy […]

Read More