Today is Fed announcement day. It is unwise to day-trade today unless you have a specific strategy that centers around the Fed decision. So I am refraining from announcing key levels, except that a sell-off for a few days is likely to follow on any day where we close below the previous day’s low. For sure, though, 4600 is a crucial support level on the daily chart and should hold unless a more extensive correction gets underway. Also, the nominal 40-day cycle dip is on the docket soon, though it may be mild in the context of the current rally and positive seasonality.
This year, the market rallied into the Fed meetings, and a few sessions beyond, before correcting a few days. What is unusual about this Fed meeting is that the market expects the governors to throttle back on bond purchases (Quantitative Easing). That is equivalent to a mild tightening. So why has the market rallied this time?
The most logical expectation is that the economy is slowing, the yield curve is inverting, and that should take the pressure of the Fed, interest rates, and inflation. The Fed’s potential action also is considered anti-inflationary. Inflation may very well be the greatest threat on the economy’s table.
In short, the Fed does not need to do anything dramatic today and has a runway to unwind some of its easy policies. Only time will tell. Success requires a delicate balance – a slowing economy that doesn’t slip into a recession. We used to call this Goldilocks from the famous fable – not too hot and not too cold.
What has been interesting to watch are the four major indices. The Dow, S&P 500, NASDAQ 100, and Russell 2000 have been vying for leadership off the early October lows like a good horse race. Uncertainty in the direction of interest rates has contributed to this contest for leadership. Rates drive sector rotation, and investors/traders have been understandably indecisive in picking the winners.
Keep your eye on the Russell 2000 (IWM) as it is on the verge of a breakout from the nine-month base. That could be very powerful should the breakout materialize. The Russell, Financials (XLF), Energy, Dow, and other cyclicals will benefit from mildly rising interest rates. Technology typically lags in such an environment.
From the bigger picture, note the rising wedges on the NASDAQ 100 and S&P 500 daily charts. Normally, that means a dip ahead. The market has been strong, and not all patterns have followed through successfully and reliably. Nevertheless, note the rising wedge pattern in your narrative. As set forth above, the nominal 40-day cycle dip is due any time and, in an ideal world, would result in a few days of weakness into early next week. A break of the wedge would get the ball rolling.
Expect a balancing market into the Fed meeting. After the Fed announcement or later this evening, I will publish a “View from the Top” macro perspective.
A.F. Thornton