‘Ample Tradable Opportunities’

Plainly, something was "amiss" in equities on Thursday, although I'm not sure "amiss" is the right word. What should've been another downbeat day based on a hotter-than-expected September CPI report in the US morphed into a raucous affair on Wall Street, where stocks were sharply higher, up some 3% into the close. The S&P enjoyed one of its best days of the year after staging a 194-point reversal from a fresh bear market low (figure below). The Dow's turnaround from the lows on Thursday

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9 thoughts on “‘Ample Tradable Opportunities’

  1. This all shows how fragile and illiquid the markets are at present. A further rally cannot be discounted. So far it still looks like a bear market rally though.

    1. “This all shows how fragile…” – maybe also indicating that “future position and momentum can not be predicted by initial conditions”? 🙂

      The more I travel, the less worried I become about “just staying long US equities” (even after living through 2022 YTD). Obviously, I am not a trader at heart.

      A reworking of “the way the world works” that could potentially be a significant threat to US supremacy will likely not occur anytime soon- due to what is happening at individual country levels- where most developing countries will not be able to achieve their full potential due to a lethal and/or missing healthy combination of demographics, “rule of law” and property rights; combined with systemic and high levels of internal corruption (which make the level of existing level of corruption in the US seem relatively mild). Having said that: if I could make an immediate change in the US, it would be for the US to incorporate critical thinking and analysis into our K-12 curriculum (see Denmark),

      1. +1 When did we decide to stop teaching critical thinking in US schools? We’re paying for it now with a large portion of the population unable to tell fact from fiction. God help us if they get their hands on the steering wheel again. They’ll take us right over the cliff believing Newton and Einstein were conspiracy actors.

        1. To be fair, I doubt that the teaching of critical thinking skills were any better in the past. I think it has more to do with a lack of ability for people to understand the complexities of the modern world combined with much more powerful tools of manipulation as it is the teaching of critical thinking skills. You could have just as easily duped US citizens 100 years ago as you could today.

  2. H-Man, The flip was due to the mother of all short squeezes. The Dow was up 200 to 300 going into the print, when it hit, the market flipped down to 400 or 500 but those losses were paring down going into the open. The market continued a slow slide down ending in positive territory but at the open every short was in the money. So God knows how much of this was short covering.

  3. I thought in an article a couple of weeks ago when possible SP targets were discussed, depending on what price times earnings were, we could see 3700, 3500 or the most pessimistic was 3300. Well we blew by 3700 and hit 3500. I suppose we will see more downward revisions to the 3000 range. I was very disappointed that I was in a meeting so I couldn’t trade at the open.

  4. Of the two ways to avert Gilt Armaggedon, Truss caving seems less “market friendly” than BOE caving. In a few weeks, investors will be glumly watching BOE hiking and selling.

    I think a hot CPI was mostly expected after a hot PPI, and being heavily short into the start of earnings season is risky, since expectations are pretty negative there too, plus no imminent UK implosion, so lots of covering.

NEWSROOM crewneck & prints