Crash Pattern Matching Methodology
Our proprietary pattern matching algorithm compares current market drawdown trajectory against 12 historical crashes spanning 1929-2025. We analyze 15+ indicators including days from peak, drawdown percentage, VIX levels, credit stress ratios, yield curve inversion status, DXY dollar strength, and capitulation signals. The algorithm uses dynamic time warping (DTW) to align sequences and calculate similarity scores even when crashes unfold at different speeds.
Seven-Phase Crash Framework Explained
- Phase 1 - Peak/Euphoria: All-time highs, VIX below 15, CAPE above 30, extreme complacency, record margin debt. Typical duration: Days to weeks. Example: January 2000 (NASDAQ 5,048), October 2007 (S&P 1,565), January 2022 (S&P 4,818). Characteristics: News headlines declare "new era", retail investors rush in, insiders sell quietly.
- Phase 2 - The Crack: Initial 5-10% drawdown, VIX spike to 20-30, first break below key support, denial phase begins ("just a healthy correction"). Duration: Days to weeks. Example: February-March 2000 (-10%), August 2007 (-8%), January 2022 (-12%). Characteristics: "Buy the dip" mentality still strong, volume spikes on down days, breadth deteriorates.
- Phase 3 - False Hope Rally: 30-50% retracement of initial decline, VIX normalization back to 18-25, technical bounce off oversold levels, shorts cover. Duration: Days to months. Example: April-August 2000 (+20% bounce), October-December 2007 (+8%), February-March 2022 (+8%). Characteristics: "Worst is over" narrative, traders try to time the bottom, insiders continue selling.
- Phase 4 - The Grind: Slow deterioration with lower highs, grinding 1-2% daily declines, credit stress builds (TED spread widens), economic data weakens, correlation increases. Duration: Weeks to months. Example: September 2000-March 2001, January-July 2008, April-September 2022. Characteristics: Hope fades, defensive sectors outperform, put/call ratio rises above 1.0.
- Phase 5 - Realization: Break below all key support levels, panic selling begins, VIX sustained above 30, credit spreads widen sharply, correlation approaches 1.0. Duration: Days to weeks. Example: March-April 2001, September 2008 (Lehman), October 2022. Characteristics: Capitulation begins, forced liquidations, margin calls, hedge fund redemptions.
- Phase 6 - Acceleration: Rapid 20-40% decline in weeks, VIX spikes above 40, circuit breakers triggered, credit markets freeze, indiscriminate selling. Duration: Days to weeks. Example: September-October 2008 (-35% in 30 days), February-March 2020 (-34% in 23 days). Characteristics: Liquidity crisis, "dash for cash", correlations break down, safe havens fail.
- Phase 7 - Capitulation: Peak fear (VIX 60-80+), record volume on down days, put/call ratio above 1.5, insider buying begins, government intervention. Duration: Days. Example: October 2002 (VIX 45), March 2009 (VIX 59), March 2020 (VIX 82). Characteristics: Market forms bottom, momentum extreme, volatility peaks, Fed/government announces rescue package.
Pattern Similarity Scoring Algorithm
Similarity scores (0-100%) represent how closely the current market trajectory matches a historical crash at the same number of days from peak. The algorithm calculates:
- Price Pattern Similarity (40% weight): Dynamic Time Warping (DTW) distance between current drawdown curve and historical drawdown curve. Normalized by crash severity to compare crashes of different magnitudes. Accounts for speed differences (1987 fast vs 2000 slow).
- Volatility Pattern Match (25% weight): VIX level comparison, VIX term structure (contango vs backwardation), VVIX (volatility of volatility), Realized vs implied volatility spread. High scores when VIX patterns match (e.g., sharp spike in Phase 2, sustained elevation in Phase 4-6).
- Credit Stress Alignment (20% weight): TED spread levels and trajectory, Investment grade and high yield spreads, Commercial paper rates, CMBS spreads, Regional bank health (KRE performance). Critical for identifying 2007-2009 style credit-driven crashes.
- Economic Indicator Match (10% weight): Yield curve shape (normal, flat, inverted), Unemployment rate and direction, ISM PMI (manufacturing/services), Leading Economic Index (LEI), GDP growth trajectory. Helps distinguish recession-driven crashes from bubble pops.
- Sentiment Extremes (5% weight): Put/call ratio levels, Dark pool activity divergence, Insider selling intensity, Margin debt levels, Fund flows (equity to money market). Captures behavioral similarities between current market and historical periods.
Interpretation Guide: 0-40% similarity: No meaningful pattern match. 40-60%: Weak correlation, some indicator overlap. 60-75%: Moderate match, several indicators aligned. 75-85%: Strong pattern correlation, high predictive value. 85-100%: Exceptional similarity, rare event (occurs less than 5% of the time).
Historical Crashes Analyzed (12 Major Events)
- 1929-1931 Great Depression: -89% peak-to-trough, 813 days duration. Pattern: Classic seven-phase crash with massive False Hope Rally (+48% in 1930). Credit crisis + bank failures. VIX equivalent: ~60. Unique: Deflationary spiral, gold standard constraints.
- 1937-1938 Recession Crash: -60% decline, 385 days. Pattern: Rapid Phase 2-6 progression, minimal False Hope Rally. Cause: Fed tightening too soon after Depression recovery. Similar to 2022 bear market (premature tightening).
- 1987 Black Monday: -34% decline in 2 days, total crash 65 days. Pattern: Extremely compressed phases (all 7 phases in 10 weeks). VIX spiked to 150+. Unique: Portfolio insurance feedback loop, no recession, V-shaped recovery.
- 2000-2002 Dot-Com Bubble: -78% (NASDAQ), 929 days. Pattern: Textbook seven-phase crash with extended False Hope Rallies (6+ bounces of 20%+). CAPE peaked at 44. Slow bleed vs rapid crash. No credit crisis, minimal contagion to economy.
- 2007-2009 Financial Crisis: -57% decline, 517 days. Pattern: Classic credit crisis phases. TED spread peaked at 4.65% (vs normal 0.30%). Multiple false bottoms (Bear Stearns, Lehman, AIG). VIX peaked at 89. Required massive government intervention (TARP, QE1).
- 2020 COVID Crash: -34% decline in 23 days, fastest crash ever. Pattern: Compressed phases due to exogenous shock (pandemic). VIX spiked to 82. Unique: Circuit breakers triggered 4 times. Recovery also fastest due to unprecedented Fed intervention ($5T+ stimulus).
- 2022 Bear Market: -27% decline, 281 days. Pattern: Inflation-driven crash with grinding Phase 4. No Phase 7 capitulation (VIX only reached 35). Fed tightening cycle. Similar to 1973-74 and 1937-38. Rotation from growth to value, no systemic crisis.
- 5 Additional Historical Patterns: 1973-74 Oil Crisis (-48%), 1980-82 Volcker Recession (-27%), 1990-91 Gulf War Recession (-20%), 2011 European Debt Crisis (-19%), 2015-16 China Devaluation (-14%). Used for pattern matching but less severe than major crashes.
Current Pattern Match Interpretation
When the tracker shows "Primary Match: 2000-2002 Dot-Com Crash, 73% similarity, Historical Day 145", this means: Current market trajectory is 73% similar to how the 2000-2002 crash unfolded at 145 days from peak (approximately May 2000 in that crash). Similarity is based on drawdown depth, volatility pattern, valuation metrics, and sentiment. If similarity remains high, historical trajectory suggests what typically happens next in that phase.
Important Caveats: High similarity does NOT guarantee the same outcome (correlation is not causation). Market conditions differ - monetary policy, valuations, geopolitical events are never identical. Pattern matching works best for identifying phases and risk levels, not for predicting exact price targets or timing. Use as one input among many for risk management decisions.
Crash Phase Transitions and Signals
Phase transitions are detected through multi-indicator analysis:
- Peak → The Crack (Phase 1 → 2): Triggered by: First break of 200-day MA with volume spike, VIX surge above 20, Breadth breakdown (advance/decline ratio negative for 5+ days), High yield spreads widen 50+ basis points. Confidence threshold: 70%.
- The Crack → False Hope Rally (Phase 2 → 3): Triggered by: Oversold bounce (RSI below 30 then reversal), VIX normalization (decline back toward 20), Short covering (short interest decreases), Technical support holds. Confidence threshold: 60%.
- False Hope Rally → The Grind (Phase 3 → 4): Triggered by: Failure to make new highs, Lower high formation, VIX floor rises (lows getting higher), Credit stress persists (TED spread stays elevated), Economic data deteriorates. Confidence threshold: 65%.
- The Grind → Realization (Phase 4 → 5): Triggered by: Break below all support levels, VIX sustains above 30, Put/call ratio above 1.2, Margin debt declines sharply, Fund outflows accelerate. Confidence threshold: 75%.
- Realization → Acceleration (Phase 5 → 6): Triggered by: Daily declines exceed 3%, Volume spikes to 2x average, VIX spikes above 40, Credit spreads blow out, Correlation nears 1.0 (all stocks fall together). Confidence threshold: 80%.
- Acceleration → Capitulation (Phase 6 → 7): Triggered by: VIX peaks above 60, Record volume on selling climax, Put/call ratio extreme (1.5+), Insider buying begins, Government announces intervention. Confidence threshold: 85%.
Data Sources and Update Frequency
Pattern matching runs every 30 minutes using: Real-time price data (EODHD API, 5-minute delay), VIX levels (CBOE, real-time), Credit stress indicators (FRED, daily updates at market close), Historical crash database (proprietary, static dataset updated quarterly), Economic indicators (FRED, updated on release schedule). Calculation time: 15-45 seconds depending on market conditions.
Limitations and Proper Usage
What Pattern Matching CAN Do: Identify which historical crash current conditions most resemble. Determine current crash phase (if in a crash). Assess probability of further decline based on historical precedent. Provide context for risk management decisions. Identify early warning signals when pattern match strengthens.
What Pattern Matching CANNOT Do: Predict exact timing of crashes (when they start or end). Guarantee current market will follow historical pattern. Account for unprecedented events (COVID-19, global pandemic). Predict magnitude of decline with precision. Replace comprehensive risk analysis.
Best Practices: Use pattern matching as one tool among many (combine with valuation, sentiment, technical analysis). Do not make binary decisions based solely on pattern match. Higher similarity (75%+) deserves more attention but not blind following. Monitor phase transitions more than absolute similarity scores. Pattern breaks (similarity drops sharply) can signal regime change. False Hope Rallies are normal and expected - don't assume crash is over after Phase 3 bounce.