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nvidia
Market News

From Slump to Surge: Nvidia’s Stock Rebound Shakes Up the Market

Nvidia Corp. shares surged back with impressive force on Tuesday after a three-day slide that sent them into correction territory. The stock jumped 6.8%, securing its position as the second-best performer in the S&P 500 SPX for the day. This strong rebound came after Nvidia shares (NVDA) had fallen 12.9% over the preceding three sessions. This was the first time since March 9, 2021, that Nvidia’s stock climbed by 6% or more following a decline of 6% or more in the previous session, according to Dow Jones Market Data. Morgan Stanley reaffirmed its optimistic outlook on Nvidia’s stock in a Tuesday report, following a recent trip to Taiwan. “Demand-side indications remain robust, with surprising demand still for H100, growing visibility for limited H200 ramp, Blackwell demand booked out through mid-next year, and a strong ramp of the H20 for the China market,” wrote Morgan Stanley analyst Joseph Moore. The H100 is Nvidia’s older chip, while the H200 is its current line. Blackwell is expected to start shipping later this year. Moore also acknowledged a “mixed” supply-chain situation, though this was not unexpected. For instance, it makes sense that the H100 has “very short” lead times given where Nvidia is in its product lifecycle, he said. “We are, of course, aware that the stock has added nearly a trillion in market cap since earnings, so a good outlook is at least partly discounted — but we can report that the outlook does remain good,” he added. UBS analyst Karl Keirstead also found strong support for Nvidia in his recent survey of enterprise executives. “As expected, and consistent with the results of our prior survey, Nvidia remains the dominant choice for both training and inference workloads, with respondents now leaning much more into Hopper (H100 + H200) and away from legacy and lower-end GPUs,” he wrote. Furthermore, Keirstead noted that rack-scale systems are set to experience significantly higher demand, particularly for model work. John PaulJohn Paul is the founder of DayTradeToWin, a trading education and software company established in 2008, supporting traders worldwide. His expertise focuses on price action-based futures trading strategies and structured market analysis. DayTradeToWin delivers trading education, indicators, and software tools designed to help traders apply disciplined, rule-based decision-making across global futures markets. He is the creator of multiple trading methodologies, including the Sonic System, Atlas Line, and Trade Scalper, which help traders identify structured opportunities in markets such as the E-mini S&P 500 (ES), Nasdaq (NQ), crude oil (CL), and gold (GC). Official website: https://daytradetowin.com daytradetowin.com

wall street
Market News

A Surprising Turn on Wall Street: What It Means for Your Investments

Something unusual is happening on Wall Street, boosting the confidence of stock-market bulls as the first half of 2024 draws to a close. Corporate-earnings estimates, which typically decline throughout the year, are actually growing, according to FactSet data. John Butters of FactSet shared with MarketWatch that S&P 500 firms have seen their earnings-per-share estimates for 2024 increase by 2.4% since late December, reaching $244.79. In contrast, bottom-up estimates have typically fallen 2.6% on average during the first six months over the past decade. Estimates for 2025 are also rising, up 4% to $279.46, compared with an average decline of 1.7% for the second year out. Analysts expect the S&P 500 to report year-over-year earnings growth of 11.3% in 2024 and 14.4% in 2025. This optimism is strengthening bullish investors’ confidence despite a growing list of concerns from market skeptics. Common concerns include high valuations for large-cap stocks, the S&P 500’s dependence on Nvidia Corp., political risks related to the upcoming U.S. election, and uncertainty around the Federal Reserve’s interest-rate cut, even as data suggest the U.S. economy is straining under high interest rates. Despite these worries, many Wall Street strategists are optimistic, with several recently raising their price targets for 2024, citing rising corporate forecasts to support their positive outlooks. “We’ve been surprised by how rapidly expectations for earnings have grown,” said a team at Capital Economics on Friday, announcing their decision to raise their 2024 price target for the S&P 500 to 6,000. Expectations vs. reality To be sure, earnings expectations are merely that — expectations. Typically, Wall Street’s forecasts for the largest companies are too conservative. This was evident in the first quarter when S&P 500 firms outperformed estimates, mainly due to contributions from Nvidia and other giants like Microsoft Corp. The return to strong earnings growth in the first quarter marked a significant shift from 2023, when an “earnings recession” led to just 1% growth. Despite this turnaround, some skeptics worry that the AI boom has introduced uncertainty to Wall Street’s earnings outlook. The timing of AI’s promise to boost productivity remains unclear, and so far, aside from Nvidia and a few semiconductor companies, few firms have significantly benefited from AI. The Capital Economics team acknowledged the risk of overly optimistic earnings expectations but saw no reason to doubt them, given the strong performance in the first quarter. Wall Street does not expect Nvidia and its peers to sustain their rapid earnings growth. Consensus forecasts for the S&P 500 suggest that the top 10 stocks’ contribution to overall earnings growth will decline in the second half of 2024, while contributions from the other 493 companies will rise. This trend is expected to continue into early 2025. The big question: Can margin growth keep up? Bearish investors see a potential inconsistency between earnings expectations and sales growth. FactSet estimates suggest sales will grow by just 5% in 2024 and 5.8% in 2025, meaning companies will need to expand net margins to meet profitability targets. Lisa Shalett, chief investment officer of Morgan Stanley Wealth Management, noted that consumer prices are no longer rising faster than wholesale prices, limiting companies’ pricing power. Any further margin expansion will likely require cost-cutting, lower labor costs, or increased productivity, Shalett said. Some previously skeptical investors are becoming more optimistic about margin expansion. S&P 500 companies reported an aggregate net profit margin of 11.8% for the first quarter, close to the record 12.2% margin in 2021, according to FactSet. This convinced James Abate, fund manager of the Centre American Select Equity Fund, that large American companies might continue expanding their margins in the coming quarters. He previously viewed this as a potential hurdle for the rally. “I’m becoming more optimistic about it,” Abate told MarketWatch. U.S. stocks traded mixed on Monday, with the S&P 500 losing 0.3% to 5,447.87 and the Nasdaq Composite shedding over 192 points, or 1.1%, to 17,496.82. Both indexes were affected by a 6.7% decline in Nvidia shares, officially entering correction territory. The Dow Jones Industrial Average, meanwhile, gained over 260 points, or 0.7%, to close at 39,411.21. John PaulJohn Paul is the founder of DayTradeToWin, a trading education and software company established in 2008, supporting traders worldwide. His expertise focuses on price action-based futures trading strategies and structured market analysis. DayTradeToWin delivers trading education, indicators, and software tools designed to help traders apply disciplined, rule-based decision-making across global futures markets. He is the creator of multiple trading methodologies, including the Sonic System, Atlas Line, and Trade Scalper, which help traders identify structured opportunities in markets such as the E-mini S&P 500 (ES), Nasdaq (NQ), crude oil (CL), and gold (GC). Official website: https://daytradetowin.com daytradetowin.com

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Market News

Election Year Boom: Key Factors for Sustaining the Stock Market’s Record Rally

U.S. stocks have posted an impressive election-year rally so far in 2024. As investors question whether the rally will continue, they’re closely watching inflation and economic-growth data to gauge the Federal Reserve’s potential interest-rate decisions and corporate earnings in the second half of the year. The S&P 500 is on track for its best first-half performance during an election year since 1976 and the second-best performance in an election year in its history, according to Dow Jones Market Data. However, the rally has “left valuations stretched, sentiment optimistic, and the market overbought,” say analysts at Ned Davis Research. Several factors leave the U.S. stock market vulnerable to a correction in the second half of the year, the analysts noted — including corporate earnings estimates, uncertainty around potential Fed rate cuts, the upcoming presidential election, and the limited breadth of the market’s rally. While earnings estimates have been improving since the start of the year — with analysts now expecting earnings growth of 12% to 13% for 2024 — valuations are rising even faster, said Sam Stovall, chief investment strategist at CFRA. This could be concerning, Stovall told MarketWatch. “We have to see whether the rising stock prices and price-to-earnings ratios are actually the result of the market expecting better earnings,” he said. For now, as investors wait for the second-quarter earnings season to kick off, such data is mostly on the back burner, he added. Investors are even more concerned about persistent inflation, which together with growth data will influence the timing and magnitude of any interest-rate cuts by the Fed this year, said William Northey, investment director at U.S. Bank. While the Fed has forecasted only one rate cut for the rest of the year, fed-funds futures traders are currently pricing in two cuts starting in September, according to the CME FedWatch Tool. The most important inflation-related data point to be released next week is the personal-consumption expenditures, or PCE, price index due out Friday. James Ragan, director of wealth-management research at D.A. Davidson, expects the PCE numbers for May to confirm that inflation is slowing, as was reflected in consumer-price index data released earlier this month. Stovall echoed that point, saying he expects both the headline and core PCE inflation figures to be lower than in the previous month, which may bode well for the stock market. Meanwhile, economic-growth data remains another major focus, as the market is expecting U.S. GDP growth to slow but stay positive, Ragan noted. “If we get weaker data, it’s not necessarily bad for the market,” he said, as that could spur the Fed to move quicker on rate cuts. “Bad news is good news — as long as it’s not too bad news.” For the stock market to continue its rally, investors will need to see a broadening of the rally from both a price perspective and an earnings-contribution perspective, said U.S. Bank’s Northey. He observed that so far this year, the stock market’s strength has mostly been driven by megacap tech companies like Nvidia Corp., due to their outsized earnings growth and excitement around artificial intelligence applications. The S&P 500’s 14.6% gain so far this year has mostly been driven by its information-technology sector, which has risen 28.7%, and its communication-services sector, which has advanced 24.8%, according to FactSet data. “If the economy is achieving a soft landing and stays positive, we would expect to see better participation from some of the cyclical sectors such as energy, financials, materials, and industrials,” Ragan said. “We should watch those sectors pretty carefully; if they start to perform better, that’s how we’ll have a more sustainable rally.” U.S. stocks ended this past week higher, with the Dow Jones Industrial Average up 561.17 points, or 1.5%, to 39,150.33, according to Dow Jones Market Data. The S&P 500 finished the week up 33.02 points, or 0.6%, at 5,464.62, while the Nasdaq Composite closed the week up 33.02 points, or 0.6%, at 5,464.62. Next week, investors will also be watching for new consumer-confidence data on Tuesday, new home-sales data on Wednesday, and initial jobless-claims numbers on Thursday. John PaulJohn Paul is the founder of DayTradeToWin, a trading education and software company established in 2008, supporting traders worldwide. His expertise focuses on price action-based futures trading strategies and structured market analysis. DayTradeToWin delivers trading education, indicators, and software tools designed to help traders apply disciplined, rule-based decision-making across global futures markets. He is the creator of multiple trading methodologies, including the Sonic System, Atlas Line, and Trade Scalper, which help traders identify structured opportunities in markets such as the E-mini S&P 500 (ES), Nasdaq (NQ), crude oil (CL), and gold (GC). Official website: https://daytradetowin.com daytradetowin.com

Market News

Market Surge Hits Shorts Hard, Warns JPMorgan: Brace for Potential Stock Volatility

On Thursday, Nvidia NVDA saw a roughly 7% peak-to-trough range, ending the day down 3.5%. This volatility has become a hot topic on Wall Street, with Friday’s futures indicating a cautious start. Is this dip a sign of waning exuberance that recently made Nvidia the world’s most valuable company, lifting many AI stocks along with it? Or is it simply a brief bout of profit-taking for an overbought stock? Time will tell. However, Nvidia’s downturn on Thursday rattled several major tech stocks, suggesting that the market, after reaching record highs, may now be more sensitive to doubts and unexpected bad news. One potential reason for this fragility is record-low bearish positions in key assets, according to JPMorgan analysts led by Nikolaos Panigirtzoglou. “A key support for the U.S. equity market over the past year was the decline in short interest on the two biggest equity ETFs, SPY (S&P 500) and QQQ (Nasdaq 100),” they noted on Thursday. Short positions benefit from selling an asset and buying it back at a lower price, and they can also hedge long bets. JPMorgan explains that SPY and QQQ are primary tools for betting on equities at an index level, and the reduction in short interest has supported these indices as short positions were covered. However, data shows no significant increase in short interest in individual stocks like the Magnificent 7 (Alphabet, Apple, Amazon, Meta, Microsoft, Nvidia, Tesla) or the S&P 500 over the past year. Why the decline in short positions? JPMorgan cites three reasons: it’s tough to stay short in a rising market, regulatory demands for transparency squeeze short sellers, and the 2021 meme-stock frenzy deterred some shorts. Short-bias equity hedge funds have seen a sharp decline in assets under management in recent years. As short positions fall, non-bank investors globally hold the highest proportion of equities since the financial crisis. “This steady flow of support from covering short positions has suppressed realized volatility, allowing volatility-targeting investors to take larger equity positions,” says JPMorgan. Essentially, the decrease in short positions in SPY and QQQ is a bet on low volatility. Given the current low short interest, this implicit short volatility trade is historically extended, posing a risk to U.S. equities if negative news reverses the past year’s decline in short interest, the bank concludes. John PaulJohn Paul is the founder of DayTradeToWin, a trading education and software company established in 2008, supporting traders worldwide. His expertise focuses on price action-based futures trading strategies and structured market analysis. DayTradeToWin delivers trading education, indicators, and software tools designed to help traders apply disciplined, rule-based decision-making across global futures markets. He is the creator of multiple trading methodologies, including the Sonic System, Atlas Line, and Trade Scalper, which help traders identify structured opportunities in markets such as the E-mini S&P 500 (ES), Nasdaq (NQ), crude oil (CL), and gold (GC). Official website: https://daytradetowin.com daytradetowin.com

deflation
Market News

Brace for a Gentle Decline: Slow Deflation vs. a 40% Market Drop

Current forecasts suggest that the likelihood of a U.S. stock market crash is below average. According to State Street Associates’ “froth forecasts,” which draw on Harvard professor Robin Greenwood’s research, there’s an 18% chance of a 40% market decline within the next two years, compared to a five-year average of 26%. This outlook extends to the high-tech sector, known for its recent dynamic returns. State Street estimates its crash probability to be four percentage points lower than the five-year average. Yale University’s Will Goetzmann contends that bubble predictions often reflect more about the analysts making them than the actual risk. Many lack precise definitions and criteria for what constitutes a bubble or a crash, leading to more subjective and less reliable predictions. The crash probabilities by Greenwood and State Street are linked to the market’s performance over the past two years. Higher past performance correlates with a higher likelihood of a crash. For instance, a 100% price increase over two years raises the crash probability to 50%, while a 150% increase nearly guarantees it. However, the S&P 500’s 48.9% return over the past two years is well below these critical levels. Some argue that the market’s reliance on the largest stocks indicates an imminent bubble. The cap-weighted S&P 500 has outperformed the equal-weight version by more than 10 percentage points this year and by 12 percentage points last year. This concentration in large stocks is viewed by some as a sign of market vulnerability. However, historical data since 1970 shows no consistent pattern supporting this theory. Although the U.S. stock market is overvalued, there are various ways it can correct itself besides crashing. According to State Street’s forecasts, a gradual adjustment through mediocre performance is more likely than a sudden crash. John PaulJohn Paul is the founder of DayTradeToWin, a trading education and software company established in 2008, supporting traders worldwide. His expertise focuses on price action-based futures trading strategies and structured market analysis. DayTradeToWin delivers trading education, indicators, and software tools designed to help traders apply disciplined, rule-based decision-making across global futures markets. He is the creator of multiple trading methodologies, including the Sonic System, Atlas Line, and Trade Scalper, which help traders identify structured opportunities in markets such as the E-mini S&P 500 (ES), Nasdaq (NQ), crude oil (CL), and gold (GC). Official website: https://daytradetowin.com daytradetowin.com

juneteenth
Market News

Juneteenth Closure Updates: Stock Market and Post Office Hours

Here’s what’s closed on Juneteenth this Wednesday, June 19, in observance of the newest federal holiday. As Americans prepare to celebrate Juneteenth, which commemorates the end of slavery in the U.S., they should be aware of the closures associated with the holiday. This includes financial markets taking the day off. June 19 marks the day in 1865 when federal troops arrived in Galveston, Texas, to free enslaved Black people in the state, almost two and a half years after President Lincoln signed the Emancipation Proclamation on January 1, 1863. Not every state ended slavery immediately following the proclamation. Juneteenth has been celebrated in Black communities since the 19th century and became a Texas state holiday in 1980. Other states followed, and in 2021, President Joe Biden signed legislation making Juneteenth the 12th federal holiday. “This is a day of profound weight and profound power, a day in which we remember the moral stain, the terrible toll that slavery took on the country and continues to take,” Biden said at the time. Here are details about what will be closed on Juneteenth: Are financial markets open on June 19? The New York Stock Exchange, Nasdaq, and U.S. bond markets are closed on June 19. Trading will resume on the morning of June 20. Does the post office deliver mail? The U.S. Postal Service will not deliver mail on June 19. However, FedEx and UPS will operate on their normal schedules. Are banks open? Banks are generally closed, but ATMs and banking apps are still available. Are government offices open? Since Juneteenth is a federal holiday, all nonessential federal government offices are closed. This generally applies to state government offices as well. Are schools open? Schools are typically closed on Juneteenth, but it’s best to check with your local school district. John PaulJohn Paul is the founder of DayTradeToWin, a trading education and software company established in 2008, supporting traders worldwide. His expertise focuses on price action-based futures trading strategies and structured market analysis. DayTradeToWin delivers trading education, indicators, and software tools designed to help traders apply disciplined, rule-based decision-making across global futures markets. He is the creator of multiple trading methodologies, including the Sonic System, Atlas Line, and Trade Scalper, which help traders identify structured opportunities in markets such as the E-mini S&P 500 (ES), Nasdaq (NQ), crude oil (CL), and gold (GC). Official website: https://daytradetowin.com daytradetowin.com

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