Why Rising Pessimism May Ultimately Be Good for Stocks
Uncertainty is running high at the moment, and it’s making investors more skittish about economic growth and the direction of markets.
I think that’s a good thing.
Investors are not wrong to be cautious. The war in Iran has pushed oil prices sharply higher and raised fresh questions about inflation. Software stocks have stumbled as investors reassess just how much future growth is already priced in. And the latest jobs data raised a few eyebrows, as U.S. nonfarm payrolls fell by 92,000 in February and the unemployment rate ticked up to 4.4%. All told, job growth has averaged just 6,000 over the past three months.
Taken together, this confluence of events has unsurprisingly resulted in rising pessimism. As seen in the chart below, bears now outnumber bulls for the first time in several months, while other measures show professional equity positioning has turned more defensive. On its face, this may seem like bad news.

But markets have proven to us time and again that they rarely rise in an atmosphere of total comfort. More often, markets move higher while investors remain skeptical and quick to focus on what could go wrong next. And in my view, that best describes the current environment.
How Do Stocks Deal With Uncertainty?
Rising pessimism and unsettling headlines can make it tempting to second-guess your investment strategy. But history has a clear answer for investors wondering what to do next.
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Expectations have dropped quickly amid the flood of war headlines, meaning markets may not need especially good news to react positively. Markets only need outcomes that are less severe than investors currently fear. This is why any time you see a hint that the war may end soon, or that shipping through the Strait of Hormuz is expected to resume, oil prices plummet and stocks rally.
To be fair, we saw the flip side of that dynamic this week when the International Energy Agency announced a record 400-million-barrel emergency release from strategic reserves. Rather than calming markets, the move was initially read as a sign that supply disruptions may be more serious and longer-lasting than previously hoped. But this reaction just gives me more conviction that investors are trading on sentiment more than underlying fundamentals.
A fundamental trade in the current environment would be long, in my view. The U.S. services sector (as measured by the ISM services index) rose to 56.1 in February, its highest reading since mid-2022. New orders climbed to 58.6, 14 of 18 service industries reported growth, and export orders also improved. These numbers suggest business activity is still expanding fairly broadly.
Credit trends also look very strong. Across the developed world, loan growth is accelerating, with banks in the U.S., U.K., Eurozone, and Japan lending at the fastest pace seen in several years. I think this trend could hold for some time, given that yield curves across major developed markets are upward sloping. Banks can borrow at lower short-term rates and lend at higher long-term rates with attractive spreads. In the U.S., companies are also finding ample financing in bond markets, with investment-grade issuance topping $208 billion in January, one of the few times monthly borrowing has ever exceeded $200 billion.
To be fair, the biggest risk investors are focused on is still Iran. Namely, that the war drags on, the Strait of Hormuz stays disrupted, and oil prices remain elevated longer than expected. This outcome would surely be impactful, as higher energy prices can pressure household budgets, push up headline inflation, and complicate the growth outlook. But it is also worth keeping the consumer impact in perspective. Gasoline is highly visible, but it makes up only about 2.9% of the CPI basket. That’s not large enough on its own to dictate the direction of the economy or stock market.
The U.S. economy is also far less vulnerable to oil shocks than it used to be. Americans consumed about 4% less gasoline in 2025 than in 2007, even as real GDP was roughly 42% larger. Energy’s share of household consumption has fallen from 5.7% to 3.7% over that span, and the shale boom has turned the U.S. into a net petroleum exporter. So while higher oil prices can still pinch consumers, they also support producers and investment in ways that were far less true in past oil shocks. I don’t mean to suggest oil can’t or won’t become a bigger problem. But I think it is fair to rule out a replay of the 1970s energy crisis and bear market.
Bottom Line for Investors
Investors have good reason to stay alert. The war in Iran, higher oil prices, weakness in some high-flying stocks, and softer jobs data have all added to uncertainty, and as long as those crosscurrents remain in place, short-term volatility is likely to continue. Markets may stay choppy as investors react to each new headline on oil, shipping, inflation, and the broader growth outlook.
But short-term volatility and medium-term market direction are not the same thing. Markets rarely need a calm, comfortable backdrop to move higher. In fact, some of the strongest advances occur when expectations are subdued, optimism is limited, and investors are constantly bracing for bad news. And that is what today’s setup looks like to me.
It’s important to remember that although pessimism is running high right now, that’s happened before, and stocks have a long track record of climbing higher anyway. I recommend downloading our free guide, How Do Stocks Deal With Uncertainty?3 It walks through 75+ years of market history, showing how stocks performed during the moments investors feared most.
Inside, you’ll find:
If you have $500,000 or more to invest, access your free guide today.
Disclosure