This article has been translated from English to Gen Z Slang.

In trading, when someone's called a "bull" or a "bullish trader," they're basically the hype squad for a security, sector, or the whole market going UP. 📈

They're vibing with the idea based on either reading the charts, studying the deets, or just feeling the economic vibes. 🧐

Bullish traders are in it to win it by cashing in on those price hikes they're manifesting. 💰

They might snag some stocks thinking they'll flip 'em for a higher bag later, AKA just "going long" in fancy-speak. 💸

The word "bull" or "bullish" comes from bulls being all extra, charging with their horns up, and showing us how to move up in the market quake. 🐂💥

Bulls are kinda opposite to "bears" or "bearish traders" who are more like, "Nah fam, prices bout to dip." 😅

The terms "bull market" and "bear market" tell us the 411 on financial market moods: bull markets mean prices are riding the elevator up, while bear markets are taking the stairs down. 📉👀

A market's seen as going full-on bull mode if prices hype up by 20% post a 20% drop, and totally bear-vibes if prices drop by 20% from the latest epic high. 📉🔄

Heads up, tho—being "bullish" ain't a money-back promise, 'cause predictions can flop like a bad TikTok challenge. 🤷‍♂️💔