Blogs -2026 Stock Market Outlook: Cycle Convergence & What's Next

2026 Stock Market Outlook: Cycle Convergence & What's Next


April 10, 2026

author

Knox Ridley

Portfolio Manager

In our last broad market update, the S&P 500 was trading near 6,850, grinding through its fifth consecutive month of going nowhere. I drew a clear line in the sand at the 6,780 level. This was where the bulls needed to hold to keep the broader uptrend intact heading into 2026. 

This level (SPX6780) remains of utmost importance for the bulls. If it breaks, then the period of volatility has already begun as we head toward 6500 – 6300 in the coming weeks. This will likely complete the first leg in a larger correction, as we mount a bounce that makes a lower high into later 2026.  

That level clearly broke, dropping the broad market over 400 points, and finally bottoming at 6,316 on March 30th. We are now staging a bounce, which our analysis suggests will likely fail to make new highs, as the period of volatility that we have been flagging since November takes accelerates. 

This should not be new to our readers. In our February 2026 report we pointed widening divergences across the Magnificent 7, deteriorating price action in non-tech sectors, and historically elevated bullish sentiment supported by record high margin debt. Each of these warning signs precedes periods of volatility, and all were present well before the index peaked on February 25th, 2026. 

Since then, the evidence has continued to build. The dominant cycles that best correlate with 2026 are all pointing lower, which is being confirmed by a growing number of markets and sectors breaking critical support globally. The current bounce will likely draw investors back in, while the weight of evidence suggests a more cautious stance. 

Our commitment is not to a single outcome; it is to follow the evidence wherever it leads. As of now, we are seeing the evidence suggest a multi-quarter topping process is finally starting to break lower, which should set up an excellent buying opportunity for those prepared. 

Why Broad Market Deterioration Points to Extended Volatility in 2026 

In our February report, we flagged that the S&P 500's push to new highs was not being confirmed by key markets beneath the surface. Most notably, the Magnificent 7, which collectively account for roughly 30% of the S&P 500's weighting, had already begun rolling over. This was substantiated by every single Mag 7 stock putting in a top between July and February, even as the index pushed to one final high on Feb 25th. 

This kind of divergence, where the index makes a new high while its most dominant components quietly deteriorate, is a classic warning sign of a market in the late stages of a bull run. 

Chart showing the S&P 500 index alongside Magnificent 7 stocks breaking down earlier, highlighting bearish divergences leading into the 2026 market correction.

Chart showing the S&P 500 index alongside Magnificent 7 stocks breaking down earlier, highlighting bearish divergences leading into the 2026 market correction. 

The weakness, however, was not confined to technology. Financials (big banks) had also put in a notable top in early January, completing a full 5-wave advance off the April 2025 low, and subsequently making their first series of lower lows since that uptrend began. This suggested that weakness that started in tech in July of 2025 was spreading.  

Daily chart of the Financial Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLF) showing a completed five‑wave advance, breakdown below key support, and early corrective structure heading into 2026

Daily chart of the Financial Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLF) showing a completed five‑wave advance, breakdown below key support, and early corrective structure heading into 2026. 

Since that report, the list of confirmed tops has only grown. Across multiple sectors and markets, we are seeing the same technical signature: a completed 5-wave advance off the 2025 lows, with the final 5th wave pushing to new highs on deteriorating volume and weakening momentum, followed by the first meaningful lower low since the uptrend began.  

Small caps tell the same story. The IWM completed its advance off the April 2025 low with a final push on fading volume and momentum. It has since printed its first lower low since the bull run began, a meaningful structural shift for a segment of the market that typically leads both up and down. 

Daily chart of the Russell 2000 ETF (IWM) showing a completed advance, failed breakout near resistance, and early corrective structure forming in 2026. 

Daily chart of the Russell 2000 ETF (IWM) showing a completed advance, failed breakout near resistance, and early corrective structure forming in 2026. 

Industrials have been a leading sector since the 2025 bottom. As you can see below, based on the above criteria, it is also confirming a period of weakness has likely begun. 

Daily chart of the Industrial Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLI) showing a completed five‑wave rally, rejection near Fibonacci resistance, and early corrective structure in 2026.

Daily chart of the Industrial Select Sector SPDR ETF (XLI) showing a completed five‑wave rally, rejection near Fibonacci resistance, and early corrective structure in 2026. 

What makes this picture more concerning is that this topping process is not a uniquely United States phenomenon, it is playing out globally. To name a few, The German DAX completed a 5-wave advance off its April 2025 low and has since recorded two consecutive lower lows.  

Daily chart of the German DAX Index showing a completed multi‑leg advance, break below support near 23,400, and early corrective structure forming in 2026.

Daily chart of the German DAX Index showing a completed multi‑leg advance, break below support near 23,400, and early corrective structure forming in 2026. 

The Canadian TSX traced the same pattern – a full 5-wave advance accompanied by weakening momentum, followed by a decisive shift in trend structure and its first lower low on elevated volume. 

Weekly chart of the S&P/TSX Composite Index showing a completed multi‑year advance, rejection near Fibonacci extension resistance, and early corrective structure forming in 2026.

Weekly chart of the S&P/TSX Composite Index showing a completed multi‑year advance, rejection near Fibonacci extension resistance, and early corrective structure forming in 2026. 

Taken together, the weight of this evidence points to two unsettling conclusions. First, the volatility we are currently experiencing is likely in its early stages, not a brief interruption of the bull market, but the beginning of a more sustained and complex corrective period.  

Second, and perhaps more importantly, this is a globally synchronized topping process. When markets around the world begin rolling over in unison, each completing the same technical structure, each showing the same deterioration in breadth and momentum, it signals that the forces driving the correction are not localized.  

This raises an important question: if this is the beginning of something larger, what is driving it, and how long could it last? 

To answer that, we turn to cycles. 

2026 Market Cycle Analysis: Gann’s 60-Year Great Cycle Meets the Presidential Cycle 

As we move into April, we now have a full quarter of price action to analyze. The pattern that has emerged is relatively unique, which helps narrow down which cycles best correlate with 2026's market behavior, so far.  

This year saw a top form within the first few weeks of the year, followed by a controlled yet choppy downtrend that bottomed into late March. The market is now staging a bounce. 

When we overlay this specific price pattern against historical cycles, two important time periods stand out as the strongest matches converging simultaneously in 2026: the 60-year cycle, which Gann himself called the Great Cycle and considered the most powerful of all his time periods, and the 4-year cycle, widely known as the Presidential Cycle.  

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The fact that both cycles are converging in the same window is not something that happens often. In Gann's framework, the more cycles that align simultaneously, the more powerful and significant the resulting turning point. This confluence adds meaningful weight to our view that 2026 is setting up to be a challenging year, but also that the low forming this year may ultimately represent another incredible buying opportunity. 

The 60-Year Cycle Great Cycle 

W.D. Gann is widely considered the master of market cycles. His work was largely built on the rhythmic repetition of the 60-year Great Cycle. He observed that markets, economies, and even geopolitical events tend to generally rhyme across 60-year intervals. His view was that human nature, collective psychology, and the underlying forces driving economic expansion and contraction repeat themselves on this grand cycle, making it one of the more reliable long-term roadmaps available. 

As you can see below, when we overlay the S&P 500's price trend from 60 years ago onto the current secular bull market, it shows a strong correlation to the general trend, and at times, a near-perfect correlation to specific price movements. 

Monthly chart of the S&P 500 overlaid with Gann’s 60‑year market cycle, illustrating historical cycle alignment and heightened volatility risk approaching 2026.

Monthly chart of the S&P 500 overlaid with Gann’s 60‑year market cycle, illustrating historical cycle alignment and heightened volatility risk approaching 2026. 

According to the 60-year cycle above, we should now be entering a period of heightened volatility. If we zoom into how this year is lining up with the 60-year cycle, we are seeing stark similarities, already.  

Daily S&P 500 chart comparing the 1966 market cycle with 2026, highlighting similarities under Gann’s 60‑year Great Cycle and key volatility windows.

Daily S&P 500 chart comparing the 1966 market cycle with 2026, highlighting similarities under Gann’s 60‑year Great Cycle and key volatility windows. 

The 4-Year Presidential Cycle 

Markets also tend to follow a well-documented 4-year rhythm driven by the political and economic policy cycle of a US president's term. What the data consistently shows is that the 2nd year of this cycle is the weakest of the four, characterized by policy uncertainty, elevated volatility, and below-average returns. 

Bar chart showing average S&P 500 returns by year of the four‑year U.S. Presidential Cycle from 1950 to the present, with Year Two delivering the weakest performance.

Bar chart showing average S&P 500 returns by year of the four‑year U.S. Presidential Cycle from 1950 to the present, with Year Two delivering the weakest performance. 

Within each 4-year cycle, there is always a significant low that tends to launch a multi-year uptrend. This low consistently falls within year 2. Since 1950, the 2nd year of a president's term has produced the cycle low 56% of the time — 9 out of 16 election cycles. The market only posts a positive return in year 2 about 53% of the time, making it the riskiest year for investors within the four year cycle.  

When we overlay the 4-year Presidential Cycle onto 2026's price action, the correlation to what we have seen so far is striking — a top in the early weeks of the year, followed by a controlled and choppy decline into late March, now setting up for a bounce into late April through early May. 

Daily S&P 500 chart comparing the 2026 market with the 2022 cycle under the four‑year Presidential Cycle, highlighting similar drawdown phases and volatility windows.

Daily S&P 500 chart comparing the 2026 market with the 2022 cycle under the four‑year Presidential Cycle, highlighting similar drawdown phases and volatility windows. 

The Composite Cycle Roadmap for 2026 Markets 

If we combine both dominant cycles into a composite, we get a general roadmap for the general trend in 2026.  

Daily S&P 500 chart illustrating the convergence of the 60‑year Gann cycle and the 4‑year Presidential Cycle in 2026, highlighting key volatility and timing windows.

Daily S&P 500 chart illustrating the convergence of the 60‑year Gann cycle and the 4‑year Presidential Cycle in 2026, highlighting key volatility and timing windows. 

What stands out is how closely the price behavior we have observed so far - a controlled, overlapping decline into late March, now transitioning into a bounce - mirrors what both cycles would have predicted. If accurate, this bounce will likely draw many investors back in, and it is the kind of move that tends to create false confidence before the next leg of volatility resumes. 

What makes 2026 particularly significant is that the 4-year Presidential Cycle low and Gann's 60-year Great Cycle are lining up at the same moment in time. In Gann's own words, it is at the simultaneous convergence of cycles, not any single one in isolation, where the most powerful and lasting market turning points are made.

Three Market Scenarios for 2026 — And What Would Trigger a Bullish Pivot 

The famous economist, John Maynard Keynes stated, “It is better to be roughly right, than precisely wrong.”  It is a sentiment that has been echoed by the world's great money managers across generations - the conviction to take a clear position, paired with the discipline to abandon it when the evidence demands otherwise. 

That principle guides the thesis presented in this report. The weight of evidence, from completed topping patterns across diverse global markets and multiple U.S. sectors, to the convergence of dominant market cycles, points to the volatility we are currently experiencing as the beginning of a more sustained corrective period, not the end of one. 

That said, markets do not always follow the most probable path. If the divergences we are tracking reverse and start making new highs, and/or if the cycles we are monitoring break their historical rhythm, we will update our analysis and pivot our stance accordingly.  

How this can translate into a clear pivot can be found in the NASDAQ-100 (QQQ). If this index breaks out to new high and closes the week over these highs, this will be a clear signal that the market is shrugging off these warnings and likely mounting a push higher.   

The NASDAQ-100, led by the Mag 7, have been leading this market down. It has been the weakest major index since the topping process began in late October. For this reason, if it can confirm a new high, and close over this high on a weekly basis, this will be the line in the sand that will warrant a pivot away from our defensive posturing. 

Intraday chart of the Invesco QQQ Trust showing a corrective decline, rebound attempt toward a critical pivot zone, and risk of a lower‑high failure in 2026.

Intraday chart of the Invesco QQQ Trust showing a corrective decline, rebound attempt toward a critical pivot zone, and risk of a lower‑high failure in 2026. 

When the facts change, we will change our mind. Until they do, we will continue to follow the evidence.  Right now, the evidence points clearly to a multi-quarter topping process finally breaking lower, which for the patient and prepared, should set up one of the better buying opportunities this cycle has to offer. 

How this looks on a larger time frame can be viewed below. Based on the price structure of the bull market off the 2022 low, two scenarios present themselves as the most probable paths forward. 

  • Scenario 1 (Blue) — Wave 4 Correction 

The current decline represents the early stages of a larger 4th wave correction. Under this scenario, the NASDAQ-100 finds its low in the $500 - $445 range, setting up a meaningful buying opportunity for a final 5th wave advance to new all-time highs in the coming year. This remains the primary count. 

  • Scenario 2 (Red) — Wave 5 Top 

What cannot be ignored is that all the necessary waves are already in place to complete the bull market pattern off the 2022 low. The overlapping swings and deep corrections throughout this advance are consistent with an ending diagonal pattern. Unfortunately, because the NASDAQ-100 is tracing an ending diagonal pattern, this determination cannot be made until we see a sizable drop and mount some type of bounce.  

  • Scenario 3 (Green) – One More Swing into the Fall 

Based on the weight of evidence, this is not my primary perspective. However, as stated above, the QQQs can close the week at all-time highs, this will become the primary perspective that we track. Here, the broad market will trend to new highs, likely on decelerating volume and momentum, completing a final 5th wave sometime into the Fall of 2026. 

Weekly chart of the Invesco QQQ Trust showing a completed multi‑year advance, potential Wave 4 correction, and key Fibonacci support levels into 2026.

Weekly chart of the Invesco QQQ Trust showing a completed multi‑year advance, potential Wave 4 correction, and key Fibonacci support levels into 2026. 

In conclusion, the evidence presented in this report did not emerge overnight. It accumulated gradually, across months and several markets, in the way that meaningful trend changes always do. From the Magnificent 7 rolling over well before the February peak, which has now spread to Financials, Industrials and Small Caps, to the synchronized topping patterns spreading across global markets, to the rare convergence of Gann's 60-year Great Cycle and the Presidential Cycle, the weight of evidence has been pointing in the same direction for some time.  

That does not mean the path forward will be a straight line lower. Markets rarely are. The current bounce was anticipated, and it will likely do what bounces in corrective markets are designed to do — restore confidence, draw investors back in, and set the stage for the next leg of volatility. That is the nature of the environment we are navigating. 

Our posture remains patient and defensive. Not because we are committed to a bearish outcome, but because the evidence has not yet given us reason to be otherwise. The line in the sand is clear. A weekly close at new all-time highs in the NASDAQ-100 changes the conversation. Until that signal arrives, the most probable path continues to favor a defensive posture.

Since our inception in May 2020, I/O Fund has delivered a cumulative return of 326%— if we were a hedge fund, we’d rank #1 and if we were a tech ETF or Mutual Fund, we’d rank #3 in the United States.    

Combining broad market analysis to buy at the lows has helped us achieve these results, including 20 entries in April of 2025 that saw up to 400% returns in one stock. To get our Top 15 AI stocks, real-time trade alerts, weekly webinars and deep-dive research from a proven team in AI and tech stocks, Sign up now.

Please note: The I/O Fund conducts research and draws conclusions for the Fund’s positions. We then share that information with our readers. This is not a guarantee of a stock’s performance. Please consult your personal financial advisor before buying any stock in the companies mentioned in this analysis.

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