Down: Strategies For Profiting A...: The Second Leg

"When the panic returns, the correlation goes to one," he noted. "Everything starts falling together. Inverse ETFs allow us to short entire sectors without the unlimited risk of a margin call on a single stock." Strategy 3: The "Safe Haven" Pivot

The air in the "War Room" of Meridian Capital was thick with the smell of burnt espresso and quiet desperation. It was October, and the market had just spent three weeks teasing a recovery. The pundits on TV were calling it a "V-shaped bottom," but Elias Thorne, a veteran short-seller, wasn't buying the optimism.

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"No," Elias said, leaning back. "Indiscriminate shorting is how you get run over. When the second leg starts, you need a scalpel, not a sledgehammer." Strategy 1: The Tactical Put Spread

As the week progressed, the rally began to crumble. Heavyweight retail stocks started missing their targets. Instead of picking individual losers, Elias moved into . "When the panic returns, the correlation goes to

He instructed Sarah to buy . By buying a put option at a higher strike price and selling one at a lower price, they limited their upfront cost while still positioning to profit from a sharp move lower. "We’re not betting on a total collapse," Elias explained. "We’re betting on the market realizing it overshot the recovery." Strategy 2: Inverse ETFs for the "Laggards"

Elias stood by the window, watching the city lights. "The second leg is about psychology, Sarah. Most people trade on hope. We trade on the math of reality." It was October, and the market had just

He stared at the flickering red and green candles on his monitor. To most, the recent bounce was a relief. To Elias, it was a "bull trap"—the cruelest part of a crashing market.