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S&P 500 Talking Points:
- Chasing breakouts at ATHs in equities continues to be a challenging strategy and that showed again last week after the S&P 500 reversed shortly after setting a fresh ATH.
- As I had looked at in the equity forecast for this year and the top trade idea for 2025, pullbacks to support can be optimal backdrops for bullish positioning in stocks.
- With USD/JPY breaking below the 150.00 level again, pushed along by an abysmal PMI print on Friday morning, the fear of global de-leveraging is bringing an impact on equities. A reversal is not a foregone conclusion at this point, but bulls should be cautious through next week’s open, and picky with exposure as this could quickly turn into a falling knife situation.
It's been a choppy start to the year for U.S. equities with the S&P 500 holding within a relatively tight trading range. I looked at this on Wednesday, highlighting the fact that despite the back-and-forth price action, there has been opportunity for shorter-term traders as there’s been several smaller-scale dips and rips.
As we wind into the close on Friday, stocks are putting in a sizable dip and as of this writing, S&P 500 futures are re-testing the 6050 level following a failure from bulls to push a breakout at all-time-highs earlier in the week. This has been a big level in the recent past as it was initial resistance back in November, just after the election, before coming in as support and resistance on multiple occasions since.
The challenge as of this writing is what may lie ahead as we near a weekly close, and there could be growing fear of a de-leveraging event as I’ll look at below.
S&P 500 Futures Eight-Hour Chart
Chart prepared by James Stanley; data derived from Tradingview
S&P 500 and USD/JPY
I’ve been tracking this theme for some time now and there’ve been several bear traps set in USD/JPY as Japanese policy makers have remained non-committal towards future rate hikes. But the fact of the matter is that Japanese inflation has remained firm and the concern is that the BoJ could get caught behind the curve, similar to the Fed in 2021 when they continually said that inflation would abate on its own.
The carry trade that build in 2021 and 2022 was a driver of global leverage as large investors could borrow money at cheap rates in Japan, and then invest that capital elsewhere where rates and investment returns were higher. As long as the rate paradigm remains tilted in the direction of the high-yielder, that increasing leverage component can continue.
But when that shifts, matters can change quickly, especially if the trade has become crowded. This is what we saw last July, when lower-than-expected CPI in the U.S. brought along realistic hopes for rate cuts from the FOMC. And at the time, the BoJ had started to shift, as well, highlighting the potential for change ahead in USD/JPY. It didn’t take long but U.S. equities soon took a turn for the worse and headlines were rampantly pointing to the unwind of the Yen carry trade as the culprit behind the sell-off.
BoJ members pulled back from hawkish rhetoric and as the USD came back to life in Q4, so did USD/JPY and U.S. equities, helping to erase those prior fears.
At this point USD/JPY remains well-elevated from the lows in early-2021 of below the 103 handle, and logically there’s still a considerable amount of carry trade that hasn’t unwound yet, which could act as a drag on stocks should that theme re-appear.
It’s still early but the sell-off in S&P 500 futures seems to be linked to the breakdown in USD/JPY below the 150-level. And perhaps coincidentally, this driven by an abysmal PMI report from earlier this morning, which normally would be considered a positive for equities as it increases hopes for rate cuts from the FOMC.
S&P 500, USD/JPY Perspective
At this point I think it’s reasonable to assume that neither the Fed nor the Bank of Japan wants to deal with another scenario such as we saw last summer, when panic peaked as the VIX spiked to its third-highest level, ever. So, at this point, I’m assuming bullish potential in stocks until something changes or shifts. But if we see the Yen carry unwind theme grow next week, that shift could happen sooner rather than later. The Core PCE report on Friday could be a big factor as signs of weaker US inflation could further drive rate cut hopes, which could thereby prod further motivation for USD/JPY longs to close positions.
At this point, I’m continuing to track support in the S&P 500 at the 6k level, followed by shorter-term levels at 5980 and 5948. If the 5948 level is traded through on a daily close basis, then I’ll begin to open the door for larger reversal potential and that will point to 5812 and 5721 as next supports, with 6k serving as lower-high resistance potential.
S&P 500 Futures Daily Chart
Chart prepared by James Stanley; data derived from Tradingview
--- written by James Stanley, Senior Strategist