U.S. stock indexes recorded their best week in a year, rising 5%-6% as post-election optimism, driven by expectations of tax cuts and looser regulations under Trump, propelled all three major indices to record highs. The Fed's expected quarter-point rate cut on Thursday kept markets steady, and eased investor anxiety, with the VIX dropping 31% to a three-month low. Bitcoin also surged, closing at $77,360 (+10.9% WoW), boosted by Trump's pro-crypto stance.
Looking ahead, strong gains last Friday suggest post-election momentum may carry into the first half of this week, ahead of the October CPI (expected at 2.6% YoY, up from 2.4% in September, with core CPI steady at 3.3%) on Wednesday and PPI data release on Thursday. With Trump back in the White House, global markets may experience policy-driven volatility.
Technically speaking, the DJIA remains in an uptrend, briefly surpassing the 44,000 mark before closing slightly lower. However, divergences in the stochastic and RSI indicators suggest potential for near-term consolidation or a pullback. Additionally, the SmartMCDX banker chip's rise past the 15 threshold supports consolidation.
In short, we expect an upward bias through the first half of the week, though CPI and PPI data coming below expectations could prompt profit-taking. Key resistance levels are 44,158 and 45,080, while support levels lie at 42,428 and 41,087, in line with the 5- and 13-week SMAs.
This book is the result of the author's many years of experience and observation throughout his 26 years in the stockbroking industry. It was written for general public to learn to invest based on facts and not on fantasies or hearsay....