Respect price over opinion when the S&P 500 range is inside a multi-month 'trading box'
Given the recent price action, the S & P 500 has been testing the lower boundary of its latest trading range — what we classify as atrading box. We view these ranges as important reference points for both risk and opportunity. The last time we saw a clear trading box breakdown was during the Feb. 2025 to April 2025 period. That makes this development noteworthy. Considering how often we discuss trading boxes with CappThesis clients, I recently went back and reread the book where the concept originated —’How I Made $2,000,000 in the Stock Market’by Nicolas Darvas. The appeal of Darvas’ work is that the framework isremarkably simple yet highly disciplined. His premise was straightforward:buy strength when price breaks out of a clearly defined trading range — the “box.” As Darvas famously said: “I buy high and sell higher.” Psychologically difficult That sounds obvious, but psychologically it’s difficult to execute. Many investors hesitate to buy higher prices, especially after watching a stock previously fail near resistance. Buying a breakout often feels uncomfortable because it requires acting when price already appears extended. Darvas understood that discomfort was actually part of the edge. He focused on stocks capable of meaningful movement — names with volatility and upside potential. His insight was that highly erratic stocks don’t necessarily attract attention because volatility is expected. Nothing about their behavior stands out. But when a stock becomesquiet and confined within a range, it fades from attention. That period of neglect is often what sets up the next meaningful move. Darvas therefore searched for stocks already inestablished uptrendsthat had paused and formed orderly consolidations. If a stock continued trading between 50 and 60, for example, he ignored it. But the moment it pushed above 60 — escaping the box — it became actionable. Importantly, he prepared in advance. Once the box was defined, he placed two orders: abuy stop above the rangeand aprotective stop just below it. The decision-making was done beforehand; execution became mechanical. As he later explained: “The main reason I made money was because I disciplined myself to follow a system.” S & P 500 in a range Sound familiar? This is essentially what the S & P 500 has been doing for more than two months. The index has oscillated inside a clearly defined range, frustrating both bulls and bears while building energy beneath the surface. Because price must eventuallyforcefully resolveabove or below the box, the day-to-day volatility inside the range should never overly concern us. What matters is being prepared to adjust positioning once a confirmed break occurs. Darvas captured this mindset perfectly: “I never argue with the tape.” And while the index has been stagnant until now, the underlying market tells a far more complex story. With503 individual stocksdriving movement, internal dispersion has been significant. Some areas continue pressing to new highs, while others have experienced deep drawdowns. Numerous studies on financial social media channels recently have highlighted just how historically bifurcated participation has become — a reminder that index stability can mask substantial rotation underneath. Despite all these crosscurrents, the key takeaway is that none of the recent twists and turns has materially changed the index’stechnical condition. For over two months, price structure has remained intact. Momentum shifts have been short-lived, breadth swings have reversed quickly and every attempted move has reverted back into the range — up to this point. Eventually, however, consolidation gives way to expansion.Thebox is defined — now we wait for resolution. Adhering to process Another important aspect of Darvas’ approach was his strict adherence to process. He only bought stocks; he did not short. He also avoided selling based on price targets, instead relying exclusively onstop lossesto manage risk and protect capital. As he observed: “Losses never bothered me after I learned to cut them quickly.” While he paid little attention to macroeconomic commentary or broad indexes, he recognized when conditions changed — specifically when his breakout trades began failing more frequently. At the time, this was frustrating. He followed his rules, took small losses, and continued executing his system. Only later did he realize those repeated stop-outs coincided with what he described as ababy bear marketfrom 1957 to 1958. Stocks he purchased near 60 and exited near 55 eventually collapsed toward 30 — a dynamic not unlike what we’ve recently seen in certain software and crypto-related names after failed momentum phases. Price, not opinion Darvas didn’t turn bearish based on opinion. He simply stepped aside because the market stopped producing the types of constructive patterns his strategy required — reinforcing another of his core beliefs: “The market is never wrong — opinions often are.” Markets evolve every year and look dramatically different across decades. Technology changes, participants change, and narratives change. But thecore principles remain constant: define risk, follow your process, and let price — not emotion — dictate your actions. Or, as Darvas summarized best: “I made my money by sitting, not thinking.” We should keep all of these points in mind if the recent volatility sticks around longer in 2026 than we’ve gotten used to over the last few years. — Frank Cappelleri Founder: https://cappthesis.com DISCLOSURES: None. 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