Stocks finished the day higher, with some wild moves in the final minutes on a $4.1 billion buy imbalance, sending the Nasdaq 100 up almost 1% and the S&P 500 up about 50 bps.
The ramp higher started around 3 PM ET, which isn’t surprising given the size of the imbalance.
Closing imbalances start accumulating at 2 PM ET, so if you can see those imbalances build, then some may try to front-run that imbalance, which appears to have happened here, and today was the month’s end.
I have been paying attention mainly to the Nasdaq over the last two weeks because it has been relatively easy to get a feel for what is happening with support and resistance.
At this point, not much has changed. The NDX did manage to close at the upper end of the trading range, which has been pretty well defined between 17,850 and 18,050.
At this point, it seems pretty easy because if the Nasdaq gaps higher today, resistance is broken, which, given where the Bollinger bands are, suggests an upside to 18,150 or, potentially, the upper end of the broadening wedge around 18,450.
If the index breaks lower, support comes at 18,040 and then at 17,475.
The dollar rose today following the inline PCE report, and at this point, the DXY has been able to break above resistance at 104.25 until we see something meaningful happen with the dollar; it is tough to see the stock market caving, and that is because financial conditions just aren’t tightening enough to bring stocks down.
Meanwhile, the inflation swaps market must not have liked what it saw in the PCE report, and based on some “preliminary” data I am seeing, CPI swaps for June are now trading at 3.06% from the previous level of 2.9%. But I won’t be able to confirm that until today, so I will probably
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