Red Market Playbook: Fortress Covered Calls, Bearish Watchlist, and Bullish Setups

When the market turns red, a lot of traders try to be heroes. They try to pick bottoms. They guess. They hope.

That’s usually how people get hurt.

In this update, Mark Yegge walked through what he showed his friend “Juicy Joe” (a covered call income trader). The main point was simple:

In a red market, don’t fight the tape. Trade what the market gives you.

That includes two things:

  1. Bearish candidates that are breaking down
  2. Bullish setups that are still working even while the market is weak

And the twist is this: you can still use Covered Calls for Passive Income and even Retirement Income goals in a red market—if you know how to use the fortress strategy and manage risk.

Image suggestion: A split graphic: left side “Bearish Watchlist” (Reddit + Adobe charts), right side “Bullish Watchlist” (AU + NVDA + MU), with a label: “Fortress covered calls = income + cushion.”

First, a Quick Disclaimer

Mark was clear: this is education, “hypotheticals,” and not financial advice. The examples discussed are for learning and process.

If you’re using this for Investing decisions, your job is to study the method, test it, and build your own plan.

What “Red Market” Really Means

A red market is basically a market environment where:

So instead of trying to outsmart the market, the better play is to:

That’s where Mark’s fortress approach comes in.

Understanding Covered Calls in a Bearish Market

Most people think covered calls are only for bullish markets.

Not true.

A basic covered call is:

But when a stock looks bearish, Mark often shifts from “traditional” covered calls to something more defensive:

The Fortress Strategy (in-the-money covered calls)

The fortress approach leans more protective. Instead of selling calls out-of-the-money, you may sell them in-the-money to create:

This is still an income strategy. It’s not about being right on direction. It’s about getting paid and managing risk.

Behind the Scenes: The Bearish Watchlist

Mark showed a “short list” screen: stocks that look like they’re trending down and may be short candidates (or candidates for defensive in-the-money covered calls).

He mentioned names like Accenture, Adobe, ADP, Blackstone, and others—but he zoomed in on two examples:

Let’s break those down.

Bearish Example #1: Reddit and the “Dreaded H” Pattern

Mark walked through how he analyzes a stock step-by-step:

What he saw on Reddit

On the weekly chart, he pointed out something like a “death cross” behavior (a major moving average crossover that often signals weakness).

Then on the daily, he highlighted a pattern he calls the “dreaded H.”

In simple terms, it looks like:

His key point: if Reddit hits a certain swing level (he referenced roughly the 127–128 area), it often wants to go lower.

The income angle: in-the-money covered calls

Instead of buying puts (which can be expensive), the approach he discussed with Juicy Joe was:

This is the fortress mentality:
sell premium, build cushion, manage the position.

Bearish Example #2: Adobe and the AI Threat Narrative

Mark’s Adobe breakdown was interesting because he explained both:

The story he sees

He believes AI is putting pressure on “software as a service” businesses because:

He didn’t say Adobe is “done.” He said the chart is weak and the business model is being challenged.

What the chart showed him

On the weekly:

He also pointed out very low relative strength (he referenced a 15 RS, meaning most stocks are doing better).

The covered call setup

He mentioned an area that looked like resistance (around the 283 level) and then showed how Juicy Joe could sell calls near the money to generate monthly income.

Key lesson: even good companies can be weak on the chart. In a red market, you respect what price is doing.

Why This Matters for Passive Income and Retirement Income

If you’re building Passive Income or planning Retirement Income, a red market can be emotionally brutal.

That’s why an income-first approach can help:

But this only works if you manage the downside. That’s the whole point of fortress-style covered calls and trade adjustments.

The Bullish Watchlist (Even in a Red Market)

Mark also showed a bullish list from his Cash Flow Machine screen.

His point:
Even when the market is red, some stocks still set up bullish. Your job is to find clean charts with strength.

He highlighted a few names:

1) AU (AngloGold Ashanti)

Why he liked it:

He connected the macro idea too:

Then he showed a covered call idea: with the stock around 110, the “near the money” calls had meaningful premium over ~38 days.

2) Broadcom (AVGO)

He noted it was getting above the 50-day moving average, which he sees as a “good things can start happening” zone.

He also flagged a key chart level to watch (around the 352 area), especially if it clears on volume.

3) Nvidia (NVDA)

He called it flat for months and hovering around the 50-day, but said:

If it can reclaim the 50-day and hold, he sees it as worth watching (especially if you believe the AI story).

4) Micron (MU)

He described:

He suggested it may want to challenge a higher resistance zone again (he referenced around the 455 area).

The Real Skill: Trade Adjustments

Mark said something important:

The money is made in the trade adjustments.

Nobody is right 100% of the time. Most traders are right 50–60% at best.

So the goal is:

That’s what makes an income strategy sustainable.

10 Life-Improving Tips for Covered Calls in a Red Market

  1. Don’t bottom-pick in a red market—trade what you see.
  2. Use the fortress strategy when downside risk is high.
  3. Think in terms of “juice” (income) plus cushion, not home runs.
  4. Don’t buy expensive options unless you understand the math—premium selling is the core edge.
  5. Always know your adjustment plan before entering.
  6. If a bearish chart is already far from the ideal entry, don’t chase it.
  7. Respect the 50-day moving average—below is caution, above is opportunity.
  8. Favor high relative strength names when trying bullish covered calls.
  9. Size down in red markets. Small positions keep you alive.
  10. Track your trades like a business: entry, strike, premium, outcome, lesson.

FAQs

1) Can covered calls work when a stock is going down?

Yes, but risk is higher. That’s why some traders use in-the-money covered calls to bring in more premium and create more cushion (fortress style).

2) Why not just buy puts in a red market?

Buying options can be expensive, especially when volatility is elevated. Covered call sellers prefer collecting premium instead of paying it—if the setup fits their plan.

3) What is a “dreaded H” pattern?

It’s a bearish chart shape Mark uses: a drop, a rounded bounce, then weakness again—often signaling a stock may continue lower after a key swing point breaks.

4) What’s the biggest risk with covered calls?

A sharp downside move in the stock. Premium cushions a little, but it doesn’t eliminate stock risk. You need position sizing and adjustments.

Call to Action

If you want to apply this right away, do this:

  1. Create two watchlists: Bearish and Bullish.
  2. Pick one stock from each list and mark the key levels (50-day, resistance, support).
  3. Write down your covered call plan: strike, premium target, and what you’ll do if the stock moves against you.

And if you want to go deep on charts, offense/defense, risk management, and covered calls in person, Mark mentioned a small 3-day Strategy Room event near Phoenix, Arizona, April 17–19, 2026 (limited seats, hotel rooms go fast). Check the pinned link or description where the video was posted.

Reserve Your Seat Now

Conclusion

In a red market, the winning move usually isn’t being brave.

It’s being disciplined.

Mark’s behind-the-scenes process is a good template for systematic Investing:

That’s how you keep trading from turning into guessing.


Educational Disclaimer: The information in this article is for education and information purposes only. This is not financial advice. Past performance does not guarantee future results. Options trading involves significant risk of loss. Consult a licensed financial professional before making any investment decisions.