There's a bullish case on stocks that's not gained much traction yet.
With another 4%-5% upside in the S & P 500 , the thesis would demand serious attention.
A Fed pause?
But this time, the S & P 500 had fallen 20% by the time the 10-to-2-year Treasury curve inverted, whereas in past cycles stocks were near a high.
The S & P 500 probably needs to reach 4300 — up another 7.5% — to make a solid case for the bear market being over, says John Kolovos of Macro Risk Advisors.