Lots of targets were tagged yesterday, beginning with SPX which nailed our 50-day moving average target.
There’s a reason, however, that futures are off even more this morning.
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Lots of targets were tagged yesterday, beginning with SPX which nailed our 50-day moving average target.
There’s a reason, however, that futures are off even more this morning.
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Futures are off moderately this morning as ES spends its twelfth day in a narrow range around its .886 Fib retracement.
August ISM manufacturing will be released at 10am ET, which should determine on which side of the trend line from Aug 28 futures will fall.
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July PCE was in line with expectations: 0.2% MoM for headline and core, 2.5% YoY (2.6% excluding food and energy.) Personal income beat at 0.3% versus 0.2% and personal spending beat at 0.5% versus 0.3%.
The print does nothing to disturb expectations of a 25 bps rate cut in September. Futures are up modestly, leaving ES at our targeted price even though a 50-DMA backtest never quite materialized.
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NVDA fell as much as 7% following earnings and guidance which failed to excite, but has rebounded to a 4.2% loss as we approach the open. If it can’t hold 122.62 after the open, our 110 target is the next significant support.
The broader market was already having a tough day before the NVDA print. As has happened frequently this past week, the algos got busy and ES rebounded strongly overnight.
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Looks like yet another day of treading water, waiting for this afternoon’s NVDA earnings and Friday’s PCE print. Futures are off modestly following seven sessions during which ES was unable to top its .886 Fib retracement.
But, attention should also be paid to our yield curve model which is sending a strong warning to equity investors.
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Futures are off moderately following yesterday’s reversal, the 6th session in a row that ES failed to surpass its .886 Fib retracement.
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In a speech that was essentially a mashup of all his other recent speeches, Powell reiterated at Jackson Hole on Friday that the pandemic – not historically dovish monetary policy – caused the recent huge spike in inflation. In fact, the Fed should be congratulated for putting out the inflationary fire that they started.
He did mention by way of a little joke that the Fed’s assessment of inflation being transitory was wrong, but that the Fed had plenty of company. Essentially, no harm, no foul.
Now, the Fed is apparently ready to lower interest rates. This view will ideally be underscored by Friday’s core PCE print. The market expects it and, in fact, needs it. But, anything more than 50 bps could be seen as the Fed panicking and could unravel the current rally as it stumbles merrily along.
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For anyone expecting Powell & Co. to spill this morning on the extent and pace of future rate cuts, don’t hold your breath. Since assuming the chair four years ago, Powell has become increasingly adept at avoiding any substantive revelations.
Of course, sometimes investors draw their own conclusions, which can make for interesting trading sessions. Yesterday, for instance, SPX tumbled nearly 1% as algos consolidated recent gains. This morning, those same algos have recovered 2/3 of those losses as they position for any Jackson Hole surprises.
No one know exactly what Powell will say or what the Fed will do over the next several months. Though, we know what they should do given the inflation surprises ahead.
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Futures are up moderately, tagging our .886 Fib target well ahead of schedule in anticipation of Jackson Hole Fedspeak which confirms the market’s rate cut expectations.
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Futures are up moderately ahead of FOMC minutes and mortgage applications.
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