Akademik

bear tack
(BAYR tak)
n.
A downward movement in the value of a stock, sector, or the market as a whole; a general sentiment that assumes a stock, sector, or the market will go down over the short or medium term.
Example Citation:
Technology, media and telecoms companies were back on the bear tack today after a profit warning from BATM Advanced Communications and another heavy fall for the hi-tech Nasdaq market in the US.
— Michael Clark, "Nasdaq's dive gives the TMTs new grief," The Evening Standard, December 7, 2000
Earliest Citation:
The market may not be going into a bear tack, but it is in a value-for-money phase.
— Hamish McRae, "Financial Notebook," The Guardian, June 26, 1985
Notes:
As often happens with stock-related terms, this phrase kept getting older the more I researched it. I eventually traced it back to 1985, which makes it much older than the usual Word Spy fare, but what the heck, it's summer.
Related Words:
dead cat bounce
fallen angel
falling knife
flash crash
irrational depression
kitchen-sink
Nasdaq
retirement panic
Rio hedge
show-me stock
single-digit midget
stuckholder
sucker rally
Category:
Stock Market and Investing

New words. 2013.