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Category: Dr. Duke's Blog
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The Standard and Poors 500 index (SPX) put on a show this week, hitting a new all-time high on Wednesday, falling out of bed on Thursday, and then recovering all of that loss today, closing at 6840. SPX opened the week at 6845 to end the week essentially unchanged. Trading volume spiked for the last three days of the week.

VIX, the volatility index for the S&P 500 options, opened the week at 15.7% and closed today at 17.4%. VIX increased all week as traders worried about the FOMC and then were spooked by Powell’s comments on Thursday.

I track the movement of the ETF containing the top 100 S&P 500 stocks ranked by beta, SPHB, to monitor the movement of high beta stocks. SPHB closed at 115.1 today, +0.7 points or 0.6%. SPHB opened the week at 116 for a weekly loss of 0.8%. SPHB trading volume spiked with the FOMC drop on Thursday but ran below the 50 dma the rest of the week. 

The NASDAQ Composite index recovered much of Wednesday’s collapse, closing at 23,725, up 144 points or 0.6%. NASDAQ opened the week at 23,537, gaining 0.8% for the week. Trading volume ran at or above the 50 dma all week.

The federal government remains closed, eliminating significant economic and unemployment data, leaving traders in the dark in terms of economic and unemployment data. The market continues to be fundamentally bullish, but with significant price spikes and declines, based on the news and rumors each day.

The FOMC reduced the federal discount rate by 25 basis points on Thursday and the market spiked higher. But then Powell threw cold water on the market when asked about another rate cut in December. Normally he would have answered that the decision would depend on the data in December, but not this time. He opined that he doubted another rate cut would occur this year. The market tanked. But we recovered most of that loss on Friday. I take that as a sign of bullish confidence. But the volatility is spooky.

My advice for next week remains the same: Stay calm and look for opportunities, but don’t force the trade. It doesn’t hurt to take a pause.