The bears are trying to take control. The Russell 2000, a basket of smaller domestic companies, entered a bear market on Monday and while the major U.S. equity indexes have yet to hit that 20 percent bear market threshold, approximately 70 percent of the stocks in our universe have, as have many sectors and countries.

Continue Reading Below

We are interpreters of the market, price first, then volume and then sentiment. We have done exhaustive studies going back 100+ years of market action. This involved many hours of study of both bull and bear markets. How do they top? How do they bottom? How do bull market rallies pull back? How do bear market rallies bounce? How do the masses react? From these studies, we have found characteristics that have shown up time and time again leading to our own set of rules based on these characteristics. In fact, this bearish action is playing out in almost classic fashion. Here’s what you need to know, in no particular order:

In bull markets, surprises happen to the upside. In bear markets, surprises happen to the downside. Johnson & Johnson has lost $40 billion of market cap, at least, on news related to allegations that the company was aware that its talc powder allegedly contained asbestos. A report the company’s CEO Alex Gorsky shot down on Monday in a video message. But do you think it would have lost that much in a bull market? In bull markets, good news is great news and bad news is even good news. In bear markets, good news is bad news and bad news is horrid news. In bull markets, overbought becomes more overbought. In bear markets, oversold becomes more oversold. In bear markets, rallies are sharp, quick and they suck you in with a feel good vibe and then screw you soon after. (We coined those words) We just had two very sharp and quick rallies up into resistance before failing miserably.

In bull markets, margin expands as greed takes over. In bear markets, margin contracts as fear takes over.. Remember, margin (leverage) is a bull market’s best friend, but biggest enemy in bear markets as leverage must come off first before the real selling starts. Margin debt is now contracting markedly down to a one year low.

More From FOXBusiness.com…