post236

Examination Time: Nasdaq 100 and Trump Behavioral Sentiment

Examination Time: Nasdaq 100 and Trump Behavioral Sentiment

Nasdaq 100 Six Month Chart as of 25th March

Near-term trading in the Nasdaq 100 will face an examination of behavioral sentiment today and the remainder of the week. The stock index finished yesterday’s trading around 20,180.44, essentially traversing near levels directly before the U.S election results were known on the 5th of November. When trading reopened on the 6th following Donald Trump’s victory, the Nasdaq 100 jumped higher and began its trading near the 20,560.00 vicinity.

On the 29th of October 2024, the Nasdaq 100 also tested the 20,560.00 ratio, before reversing lower and finding choppy conditions leading up to the election date. Behavioral sentiment was certainly a factor in the outcome of these results. It cannot be proven, but can be asked and guessed that financial institutions may have started to bet on a Donald Trump victory before the election. Big trading influences may have turned anxious in the immediate days preceding the vote, then after the results were known returned the Nasdaq 100 to highs seen the week before on the 29th of October. By the 7th of November the Nasdaq 100 was trading above 21,100.00 and this was likely a result of optimistic outlooks.

The ability to climb back above the 20,000.00 mark yesterday and sustain the level was important. Yes, if the mark fades and another downturn now occurs it will show financial institutions are still leaning into negative outlooks as they consider the implications of tariffs and potential knock-on effects from the unknown.

However, if financial institutions have decided that they have priced in maximum risk premium and the selloff of the Nasdaq 100 to the level of nearly 19,150.00 seen on the 11th of March, which tested ratios last seen in early September 2024, was extremely oversold. We then have evidence that yesterday’s results back to values seen on election day, set the table for an important examination of behavioral sentiment.

There is plenty of room to traverse from 20,180.44 to 20,560.00. Yet, if financial institutions have decided that they once again want to test optimistic mid and long-term outlooks, the price level of 20,560.00 is where they will likely aim. Day traders should not get overly ambitious and remain cautious while looking for upside momentum if that is their chosen direction.

U.S economic numbers will be light today. Tomorrow the monthly Core Durable Goods Orders data will be published, the results will be of interest because they will show manufacturing sentiment and the statistics are considered a leading indicator. Thursday will also be noteworthy because the Final GDP results will be brought forth, but because this data is based on quarterly factors, the data may not be as important as tomorrow’s opening act – the Core Durable Goods Orders.

While the economic data will be important, President Trump will remain the focus. Behavioral sentiment obviously is being swayed by the winds circulating from the White House. This is not going to change until financial institutions begin to believe the threat of rhetoric can be dismissed without fear. The 2nd of April is now being counted down and in the sights of financial institutions as they consider the implications and outcomes of tariff negotiations. The word ‘agreement’ is sought as a salve by financial institutions. Whether a soothing ointment will be provided remains unknown.

The near-term will provide a test for traders which may be quite a bit like the week before the U.S election from late October and into November 5th when the voting results were still being counted. The Nasdaq 100 has room to traverse upwards and test values from the 29th of October and after Donald Trump was elected President. The 2nd of April is next Wednesday, and trading up until then will reflect on the outlooks financial institutions have regarding tariff negotiations.

It is examination week. It is not a coincidence that the price levels of the Nasdaq 100 are treading water while waiting for impetus. Speculating on the outcome before the 2nd of April needs to be undertaken carefully. An important question each speculator (including financial institutions) taking this test must answer is this: How good is President Trump as a negotiator and will he be able to claim a victory on the 2nd of April?

post228

Market Volatility Concerns While Deflecting Noise From Afar

Market Volatility Concerns While Deflecting Noise From Afar

S&P 500 Six Month Chart as of 27th February 2025

The phrase if it bleed it leads is a fixture regarding the world of media. People and their companies want your attention. The addition of Donald Trump to the White House helps those that are content to see him in office, but it also helps those who oppose him because it gives his detractors a centerpiece to a lot of their ‘insights’. Perspectives abound and while watching the financial markets, we are bombarded with loud opinions formed by folks vying for our time. In many cases they are also trying to attract our money.

Wall Street has seen choppy results the past week, but speculators need to remain objective and not allow distractions to destroy their ability to gauge the marketplace. When looked upon with a mid-term reference it is rather easy to define the results upwards in the stock indices from the U.S have been rather good. There is no guarantee you are going to make money speculating. Losses occur and they do not only happen to speculators but they happen to investors too.

Timeframe speculative management and separating the noise from facts is difficult enough under normal circumstances. However, because of the notion if it ‘bleeds it leads’ which is dominating media for the moment, we are within a cycle when influencers can use headlines to catch our attention. Perhaps they believe what they say, perhaps they are trying to guide us towards a product, or perhaps they simply enjoy predicting misfortune.

EUR/USD Six Month Chart as of 27th February 2025

Yesterday during President Trump’s cabinet meeting when asked about the E.U, Trump stated a proclamation of love for Europe, but then added that the E.U was a special economic case and has been getting away with a lot of things like expensive tariffs on the import of U.S cars. He also said the E.U was created to compete with the U.S – though this needs to be taken into context and that Trump meant this only as a trade competitor.

Nearly as quickly as Trump made his statement, some began to use this loose remark as a narrative that the EUR/USD was struggling because of these new worries. Fears about a massive trade war were sounded from some legitimate but overly contrived media sources. Yet, a trade war between the U.S and E.U isn’t going to happen ladies and gentlemen.

The fact is that the EUR/USD has been struggling for a handful of months and is starting to show signs that support levels are durable. The greater likelihood is that financial institutions believe the EUR/USD is oversold and have a bullish perspective for the currency pair over the mid-term. Yes, Europe continues to produce lackluster economic data, but a lot of the value in the EUR/USD has had risk adverse concerns priced in already. Looking for upside from the currency pair around its current levels is not farfetched. Downside risks look limited compared to upside potential.

Once again the financial media who want your attention were given click bait material to get you to react. Day traders need to understand they are constantly being sold not only false narratives but false opportunities too. Speculators looking for profits with quick hitting trades can make money, but many times they lose money because they are working in conditions in which they do not have enough control of their emotions. Day traders should clearly understand they are operating within a gambling universe when they attempt to trade Forex, equities, Indices, commodities and needless to say cryptocurrency.

Traders must work on improving their decision making process. They need to take into consideration their perceptions of the financial landscape, but also understand what their counterparts are thinking too. Financial institutions certainly trade for short-term results, but they are also operating with mid-term outlooks. The likelihood that they are worried about an onslaught of tariffs from the Trump administration is contained by the realization that the current President of the U.S negotiates using tough methods. The bombastic hyperbole of President Trump’s business techniques are not loved by everyone, but they often get the job done regarding his intended desires.

So what should you do? First of all relax with a deep breath. The world is not coming to an end. The financial landscape is not facing a cataclysmic scenario. Many volatile financial events have been seen throughout time. Traders need to understand that the market action on the SP500, Dow30, and Nasdaq are vulnerable to selloffs occasionally that can last for unknown durations which makes daily speculative wagering prone to significant cash losses. This is why investors who have different perspectives regarding timeframes and take a slow and steady approach often come out better than folks who are merely gambling.

Day traders need to eliminate as much noise as possible. This is done with solid risk taking tactics using methods which involve knowledge gained through experience, and knowing that not everything they are hearing is meant to help. Practice a trading mantra by having realistic price targets, chosen timeframes, conservative leverage; using entry orders helps, adding stop loss and take profit orders to get out of positions are vital too.

The mid-term outlook for the EUR/USD and the stock markets likely remains bullish in the eyes of financial institutions. There are many factors in trading, and the virtues of patience and knowledge help considerably. Again, remain calm because while the financial markets often react to shortcomings via human fallibility, they frequently become optimistic once again.

postR196

AMT Top Ten Miscellaneous Votes for the 4th of November

AMT Top Ten Miscellaneous Votes for the 4th of November

10. Priorities: Not to dismiss the execution of beloved Peanut the Squirrel by New York authorities recently, but lets reflect on the fact that this little fellow made international news while wars are raging, and nearly 300 people in the U.S are dying from drug overdoses per day. Social media is rather powerful.

9. NBC: Kamala Harris appeared on Saturday Night Live for roughly 90 seconds this weekend, this created criticism and questions about unfair airtime for the Vice President. SNL is lucky to get more than 5 million viewers per episode on average. To try and apologize for the potential trouble, NBC then gave Donald Trump free commercial airtime twice yesterday, once during a NASCAR race which on average attracts over 3 million viewers, and on a Sunday night NFL broadcast which averages sometimes up to 22 million viewers.

8. Saber-Rattling: There is a potential Iran is waiting on the outcome of the U.S vote for President before undertaking more military actions. Deciding if and how they are going to launch another attack on Israel, depending on who wins the U.S election because of the potential ramifications is likely part of their military strategy.

7. BTC/USD: Bitcoin as of this writing is trading near 68,500 USD. The digital asset continues to bounce around rather intriguing resistance. On Tuesday of last week Bitcoin traded near 73,500 momentarily, while the highs are certainly noteworthy, support for the speculative asset has been around 66,000 since the middle of October. There are reasons to suspect Bitcoin will display a large amount of volatility this week, particularly when the new U.S President is known.

6. Forex: As of this writing the USD/JPY is slightly below 152.000, the EUR/USD is around 1.09000, the GBP/USD is near 1.29650. The question is where these currency pairs and other major FX assets will be in three nights. Day traders dreaming of riding momentum via financial institutions need to understand the equilibrium of risk and reward. In other words, the same amount of money you can make, is likely the same amount of money you can lose. Risk management will be a life preserver for many speculators this week.

5. U.S. Data: This past Friday the Non-Farm Employment Change numbers came in wildly below the 106,000 jobs added estimate, the result of only 12,000 hired was rather shocking, but met with almost muted bewilderment. Also, the jobs numbers showed another revision lower from the previous month. Advanced GDP quarterly numbers, on Wednesday the 30th of October, also missed their estimate coming in with a 2.8% gain compared to anticipated growth of 3.0%. The U.S economy is still under stress.

4. Barometers: Risk adverse trading has been widespread the past handful of weeks. While gold has reached new highs and is slightly below the 2,750.00 mark for the moment, one month from now will be a telltale for gold and many assets. Since the end of September a number of narratives have been heard trying to explain the results seen across the board, but the simple answer is caution has entered the markets. U.S equity indices are still flirting with highs, even as they have suffered downturns in recent trading. WTI Crude Oil is near 71.50 USD per barrel. Gold, U.S equities and WTI Crude Oil will react to the outcome of the U.S election and serve as solid behavioral sentiment indicators in one month when compared to current prices.

3. Federal Reserve: If last week’s U.S economic data had been delivered without the fanfare of the U.S election approaching, Fed observers would likely be anticipating a dovish sounding FOMC Statement coming on the 7th of November. Instead, the USD has remained rather strong as risk adverse trading has been demonstrated in the broad markets. The Fed is certainly in a position to cut the Federal Funds Rate by another 0.25 basis points, some could even argue for another 0.50% cut. However, the Fed is likely to cut interest rates by a quarter of a point and sound rather cautious as they too read the landscape in the wake of the U.S voting results. Mid-term outlook from the Fed will be scrutinized this Thursday.

2: Nervousness: Day traders who decide to participate in the broad markets near-term may also enjoy walking outside and looking at approaching storms and dreaming about the fury about to come. Being anxious before and during large risk events when outcomes are unknown is a survival instinct. Speculators need to protect themselves over the next couple of days. Tranquil trading in all major assets may appear, but as tomorrow grows long assets will begin to percolate and by Wednesday almost all financial markets will be boiling. While this is certainly being hailed as the most important week of the year because of the U.S election and the Federal Reserve, it is also a very dangerous time to be trading. Those with limited funds may want to hunker down in a safe place and watch the markets create bedlam over the next 48 hours.

1. U.S Election: The vote is less than one day away when old standards are considered. However, more than 72 million votes have been cast early in the U.S already. That’s more than 45% of the total U.S vote during 2020, when 158,434,567 votes were counted. While the media bangs the drum regarding the incoming results tomorrow, it is important to note that many Americans and global observers are merely waiting for the final results to be announced. The end of the election campaign is nearly upon us, now financial institutions and traders await clarity. Wednesday the 6th of November is going to be an interesting day for the markets.