Key Takeaways:
- A rare market pattern triggered July 5 has only appeared twice since 1871
- Both prior occurrences preceded major market dislocations
- The signal suggests heightened volatility and defensive positioning ahead
Key Takeaways:

The US stock market triggered a technical pattern on July 5 that has been observed only twice in the past 155 years, a signal that historically preceded major market dislocations.
"The recurrence of this pattern at current index levels is statistically anomalous and warrants attention," said Michael Hartnett, chief investment strategist at Bank of America. "Both prior instances occurred within 12 months of significant market peaks."
The pattern's two previous appearances date to 1929 and 2000, each preceding prolonged bear markets. The S&P 500's current configuration mirrors the breadth deterioration and momentum divergence seen in those periods, according to Bank of America's analysis of 155 years of market data.
What makes this signal different from standard technical warnings is its rarity. Conventional overbought readings occur multiple times per decade. A pattern with a 1.3% occurrence rate over 15 decades shifts the discussion from tactical caution to structural risk assessment. The trigger coincides with narrowing market participation — the gap between the S&P 500's capitalization-weighted return and its equal-weight return has widened to levels not seen since the late 1990s.
The signal's implications extend beyond equity positioning. Historically, both prior occurrences coincided with peak valuations in long-duration assets, suggesting bond and equity risk premiums may compress simultaneously. The next 12 months will test whether this pattern retains its predictive power in a structurally different market — one shaped by passive flows, algorithmic trading, and central bank balance sheet management that did not exist in 1929 or 2000.
This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute investment advice.