Index Futures Net Changes and Settlements:

Contract Settlement Net Change +/-%
S&P 500 (ESH18:CME) 2698.75 -15.25 -0.56%
Dow Jones (YMH18:CBT) 24,782 -166 -0.66%
Nasdaq 100 (NQH18:CME) 6760.50 -30.00 -0.44%
Russell 2000 (RTYH:CME) 1528.20 -2.40 -0.15%

Foreign Markets, Fair Value and Volume:

  • In Asia 8 out of 11 markets closed lower: Shanghai Comp +2.17%, Hang Seng -1.48%, Nikkei -1.07%
  • In Europe 10 out of 12 markets are trading lower: CAC -0.35%, DAX -0.72%, FTSE -0.97%
  • Fair Value: S&P -0.77, NASDAQ +4.91, Dow -17.33
  • Total Volume: 1.6mil ESH & 781 SPH traded in the pit

Today’s Economic Calendar:

Today’s economic calendar includes Weekly Bill Settlement, Randal Quarles Speak 12:15 AM ET, Jobless Claims 8:30 AM ET, Bloomberg Consumer Comfort Index 9:45 AM ET, William Dudley Speaks 10:00 AM ET, Leading Indicators 10:00 AM ET, EIA Natural Gas Report 10:30 AM ET, Kansas City Fed Manufacturing Index 11:00 AM ET, EIA Petroleum Status Report 11:00 AM ET, Raphael Bostic Speaks 12:10 PM ET, Robert Kaplan Speaks 3:30 PM ET, Fed Balance Sheet 4:30 PM ET, and Money Supply 4:30 PM ET.

S&P 500 Futures: Big Rally And Big Puke As Fed Ups The Ante, #ES Sells Off 54.50 Handles From Its High To Low / VIX Pops

The ES dropped on down to 2706.25 Tuesday night’s Globex session, and then rallied up to 2718.75. After that, it sold off down to 2706.50 at 3:15 AM, and traded 2718.25 on the 8:30 CT open. By 8:49 the S&P 500 futures had traded all the way up to 2731.50. After a pullback down 2724.00, the ES then rallied all the way up to 2737.50. The next move was down to 2728.50, and then down to 2726.50, before shooting back up to 2734.50. After another small pullback, the ES traded up to 2743.50, pulled back to 2735.50, and then shot up to new highs at 2747.00.

The MiM came alive at 1:00 PM CT, and opened up showing $800 million to buy, but the ES did not react in kind, and sold off down to 2714.50. After the low the, ES rallied and dropped a few time and, then rallied up to the 2728 level. There was a reversal back down to 2710.75 as the MiM dropped to $80 million to buy.

Going into 3:00, the ES puked all the way down to 2695.50, rallied back up to 2701.50, and traded back down to a new low at 2603.75 at 3:09. The benchmark futures settled at 2698.75, down -16.25 handles, or -0.60%, and down -54.50 handles from the high of the day.

There were two things working on behalf of the rally yesterday. The first was the lack of volume in the first part of the day. At 12:20 CT there were only 650,000 ES traded. The other part was that the QCHA was rising all morning, meaning there were stocks being bought under the surface.

What was working against the ES was WMT, AMD, RAD, BAC, GE all being down early, and the selloff in the notes and bonds. In the end, despite the big early rally, the ES’s overall tone went from a big short squeeze to an ugly reversal as the fed minutes hit the tape. Did it catch people off guard? We think it did. Were we surprised by the reversal? Not really, we suspected that after the 6 day rally, and the February options short squeeze, that there had to be some type of reversal. The big question is, is this a small bump in the road, or is it going to be a big bump?

Market update – the 2pmET Fed release caused some confusing afternoon trading patterns. Initially the minutes were deemed “dovish” and assets responded accordingly with mild DXY pressure and an SPX spike. However, that price action proved ephemeral as TSYs came for sale, the DXY spiked, and the SPX came for sale.

Treasuries were probably the most “honest” asset class and it drove stocks and FX – the TSY weakness caused curve steepening w/2yr yields up relatively small (up ~1.6bp) while 10 and 30yr yields climbed more, by ~5.7bp and ~7.2bp, respectively (this would suggest a dovish set of minutes with TSYs displaying nervousness about the Fed being behind the curve on inflation; if the minutes were very “hawkish” one would expect a spike in 2yr yields and curve flattening). As TSY yields rose it spurred mild de-risking and that caused unwinding in DXY shorts (which would explain the USD rally and SPX weakness). In reality the minutes weren’t nearly as important as they are being made out to be.

The recent inflation numbers (wages on 2/2 and the CPI on 2/14) occurred after the 1/30-31 meeting and thus these minutes are pretty stale. Much more important will be the semi-annual Fed monetary report (Fri 2/23 at 11amET) and Powell’s testimony (2/28 and 3/1) but even these events are probably not going to be terribly disruptive (this presumes the Powell-led Fed reaction function isn’t dramatically dissimilar to the Yellen-led one). If the Feb inflation numbers overshoot expectations that would create some headaches but that won’t be known for a few more weeks (Feb wages 3/9, CPI 3/13, and PCE 3/29). At this point, most don’t think the “dots” move from three to four on 3/21.

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Disclaimer: Trading Futures, Options on Futures, and retail off-exchange foreign currency transactions involves substantial risk of loss and is not suitable for all investors. You should carefully consider whether trading is suitable for you in light of your circumstances, knowledge, and financial resources. Any decision to purchase or sell as a result of the opinions expressed in the forum will be the full responsibility of the person(s) authorizing such transaction(s). BE ADVISED TO ALWAYS USE PROTECTIVE STOP LOSSES AND ALLOW FOR SLIPPAGE TO MANAGE YOUR TRADE(S) AS AN INVESTOR COULD LOSE ALL OR MORE THAN THEIR INITIAL INVESTMENT. PAST PERFORMANCE IS NOT INDICATIVE OF FUTURE RESULTS.

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