One of the most dangerous assumptions traders make is believing a stock is down too much. Price does not fall simply because it wants to be fair – it falls because sellers are still in control.

When selling pressure persists, there is no rule that says price must bounce.

Why “down too much” is a trap

After sharp declines, traders often convince themselves it’s time to buy because price looks cheap relative to where it used to be.

• A large percentage drop does not equal value
• Price can continue lower as long as sellers remain active
• Markets do not care how far something has already fallen

Oversold is not the same as exhausted.

Momentum stocks can stay broken

Recent market action has shown this clearly. Many former momentum leaders have sold off hard – and they are not recovering.

• Bounces are failing quickly
• Prior leaders are no longer being defended
• Weakness is being met with more selling, not demand

This is a sign that institutions are still reducing exposure.

Important note

Buying because a stock has reached a 20-day, 50-day, or 200-day moving average assumes those levels must hold.

They don’t.

When commonly watched levels fail, they often become areas where more sellers enter.

Why sellers can keep coming

Traders rarely know what’s happening behind the scenes.

• Funds may be facing redemptions or margin pressure
• Forced liquidations can create sustained selling
• Bad news can act as a catalyst, not a conclusion

The reason doesn’t matter. The price behavior does.

Caution

Buying weakness before sellers show signs of exhaustion turns traders into liquidity. If price continues to make lower lows, the market is telling you something.

Listen to it.

The takeaway

• There is no such thing as “down too much” while sellers remain in control
• Moving averages do not stop selling on their own
• Weakness should be respected, not rationalized
• Strength must appear before risk is taken

As long as sellers have not let up, patience is not avoidance – it’s discipline.