KEY POINTS
  • All year, the market has been consumed with the question of how much profit growth and the economy will slow in 2019 — and whether the Fed would hasten the end of this cycle with too much tightening.
  • Wall Street strategists, who typically forecast stocks to rise 7 percent to 10 percent as a group as a new year approaches, now are growing more cautious.
  • From a contrarian perspective, it's possibly quite good for stocks that sell-side handicappers are gloomier.

The S&P 500 index is down from a year earlier for the first time since early 2016, and a majority of its stocks are in a downtrend, with half of them down at least 20 percent from their highs. That's bearish action.

Yet the index has only given up one-sixth of its 60 percent rally over the prior 30 months, is down just 1 percent for the year and the 10- percent pullback from the September high isn't even as deep as the median drop from a high in a calendar year throughout history. So, is this just a rough patch in a bull market, then?