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Bull / Bear 3x,2x

 
 
 
 

Canada - Bear / Bull 3x,2x: 1 month intervals, page loads slow.
The longer the interval the stronger the trend.

 

BETAPRO CDN GOLD MINERS 2X DLY BEAR ETF

 

BETAPRO CDN GOLD MINERS 2X DLY BULL ETF

 
 
 
 

BETAPRO CRUDE OIL 2X DAILY BEAR ETF

 

BETAPRO CRUDE OIL 2X DAILY BULL ETF

 
 
 
 

BETAPRO GOLD BULLION 2X DAILY BEAR ETF

 

BETAPRO GOLD BULLION 2X DAILY BULL ETF

 
 
 
 

BETAPRO NASDAQ 100 2X DAILY BEAR ETF

 

BETAPRO NASDAQ 100 2X DAILY BULL ETF

 
 
 
 

BETAPRO NAT GAS 2X DAILY BEAR ETF

 

BETAPRO NAT GAS 2X DAILY BULL ETF

 
 
 
 

BETAPRO SP TSX 60 2X DAILY BEAR ETF

 

BETAPRO SP TSX 60 2X DAILY BULL ETF

 
 
 
 

BETAPRO SP TSX CAP ENGY 2X DLY BEAR ETF

 

BETAPRO SP TSX CAP ENGY 2X DLY BULL ETF

 
 
 
 

BETAPRO SP TSX CAP FNCL 2X DLY BEAR ETF

 

BETAPRO SP TSX CAP FNCL 2X DLY BULL ETF

 
 
 
 

BETAPRO SP500 2X DAILY BEAR ETF

 

BETAPRO SP500 2X DAILY BULL ETF

 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 


 Bull Vs. Bear Market:
A bull market is a sustained rising stock market, sometimes defined as a 20% rally from a recent low. The term can also be used regarding bonds, currencies and other securities.






 Bulls are optimistic the stock market will continue to rise in the future and are likely to buy stocks.







 A bear market is triggered when the market falls 20% from a previous high over an extended period of time.








 Bears are pessimistic about the future and expect the stock market to fall.






 Bull Vs. Bear Market Origins
It's unclear how bears and bulls got tied to financial markets. But there are some theories:






 Merriam-Webster says the term bear market came first, from a proverb about bearskin sellers in the 18th century: "Don't sell the bear's skin before you've killed him."







 Another theory on the bull vs. bear market origin has the term "bull" referring not to the animal but bulletins to buy stocks on the London Stock Exchange in the 17th century. A board full of bulletins signaled a strong market vs. when it was bare.







 Wall Street lore also says the terms came from how the animals attack: a bear slashes its claws downward while a bull thrust its horns upward.
 

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