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Our View

As you know, I’ve been thinking the fix was in ever since September 2, when the big $6.55 billion buy imbalance showed up on the close. Since then, the ES has closed higher 5 out of the last 6 sessions, While I was writing the Opening Print and reading over several bank PPI and CPI estimates calling for higher inflation, I started thinking: the banks are usually wrong when they all say the same thing. And sure enough, the ES popped up to 6565.25 on Globex after the PPI number unexpectedly decreased by -0.1% in August, contrasting with economists’ forecasts for a 0.3% increase.

After the open, the ES pretty much did what we thought it would do. It opened high, sold off as expected, rallied up to a lower high at 6562.25 at 10:15, and then sold off down to a 6540.00 double bottom. It rallied up to 6553.00 just before 12:00, then sold off to a new daily low at 6538.00, rallied to another lower high at 6551.25 at 1:03, and then sold off to 6530.50 at 2:22. It rallied up to the 6538 level and then sold off to new lows at 6522.50 after the Charlie Kirk assassination took place.

After the low, the ES rallied to the 6532 level, slid back down to a higher low at 6525.50, and that’s when the ES started climbing again. It traded 6548.50 as the 3:50 cash imbalance showed $2 billion to buy, $2.4 billion, traded 6539.25 on the 4:00 cash close, traded 6543, pulled back to the 6535 area, and settled at 6536.75 on the 5:00 futures close, up 18 points or +0.28% on the day.

In the end, PPI was a sell-the-news event. In terms of the ES’s overall tone, the big gap-up used up the early buying power, and then the late headlines added to the weakness. In terms of the ES’s overall trade, volume was higher at 1.33 million contracts traded. Oracle gained 35%, the 10-yr note yield fell -6 bps to 4.03%, Bitcoin futures (BTU25) traded up to 114,925.00, and gold closed unchanged at 3,668.60.

Today, CPI and Initial Jobless Claims are released at 8:30 AM, and the Monthly Federal Budget number is due at 2:00 PM, along with earnings from Adobe and Kroger. One of the things I haven’t covered is all the stock buybacks and the S&P quarterly rebalance that adds, removes, or reweights. After Sept. 22, Robinhood, AppLovin, and Emcor will be components of the S&P 500 index funds. We used to call these “switches,” which can cause short-term price adjustments or an uptick in volatility.

Our View

Everything is screwed up. I knew PPI was yesterday and CPI is today, but I started talking about looking for the PitBull’s Thursday low before the Friday Week 2 options expiration. Either way, there’s so much shit being thrown at the wall, it’s hard to keep up. It’s boom, boom, boom—every day. And now you have Trump blasting Powell, saying “Just out: No Inflation!!!” and again urging the Fed Chairman to slash rates.

I think we all know there’s a rate cut coming next week, but what will a 1/4-point cut actually do for the economy? Other than what JPMorgan says—a sell-the-news event going into the September Triple Witching.

Our Lean

I think we can go higher—but from lower prices or after a pullback.

Our lean: If the ES and NQ gap higher, I still want to sell the early rallies and keep an eye out for a double pump. And if the ES gaps down, I’m watching for support at the 6520 level. But if that doesn’t hold, I think I would start 60 points off the high or around the 6505-6500 area, and then the 6489 level.

I don’t know how many days in a row they can keep selling the ES and NQ off and then rallying them late, but that seems to be the modus operandi. They seem to knock ’em down to buy ’em. Let’s see how it goes…

 
 

MiM and Daily Recap

Intraday Recap

The overnight Globex session began with ES opening at 6532.25 and quickly building momentum. By 18:10 ET, futures reached 6537.75 before pulling back to a low of 6527.25 at 19:30, marking a 10.50‑point decline. Buyers regained control steadily into the night, lifting prices to 6543.75 at 03:40 for a modest 17‑point gain. The subsequent dip found support at 6529.50 near 05:10, followed by a sharp rally that peaked at 6565.25 by 08:30, the overnight high. This 35.75‑point surge (+0.55%) set the tone heading into the regular session. Globex settled at 6553.00, up 20.75 points or +0.32%.

The regular cash session opened at 6553.25 and initially climbed to 6562.25 by 10:15, setting the session high before rolling over. Sellers pushed ES to 6540.00 at 11:30, down 22.25 points from the session high. A midday bounce lifted the contract to 6553.00 at 11:50, but resistance capped further gains. Another leg lower carried prices to 6538.00 at 12:45 and then to 6530.25 at 14:30, marking a fresh intraday low. From there, ES staged a sharp reversal, spiking to 6545.00 at 15:55, briefly reclaiming positive territory. However, the late push faded into the close, and ES settled at 6539.25, down 14.00 points (-0.21%) from the open but still up 18.25 points (+0.28%) from the prior day’s settlement.

During the cleanup session, futures opened at 6539.00 and traded as high as 6541.25 before slipping to 6536.00. The session ended at 6536.75, down 2.25 points (-0.03%). For the full day, ES finished with a modest 4.50‑point gain (+0.07%), closing at 6536.75. Volume was concentrated in the regular session at just over 1.05 million contracts, with total daily volume at 1.28 million.

Market tone tilted cautious despite early overnight strength. The Globex ramp reflected carryover momentum, but sellers controlled most of the regular session until a late rebound attempt near 16:00. The broader picture shows consolidation after the recent multi‑session run‑up, with the intraday swings highlighting indecision.

The Market‑on‑Close imbalance data revealed a substantial $1.916 billion to buy, with 68.9% of dollar flow skewed to the buy side. Notably, Apple (+$323M), Amazon (+$157M), Tesla (+$141M), and Bank of America (+$136M) were among the largest buy imbalances, while Netflix (-$39M), Uber (-$34M), and AXON (-$24M) led the sell side. Sector flows showed Energy as the only group with 100% buy bias, while Financials (-63.6%), Healthcare (-59.5%), and Utilities (-74.2%) leaned heavily toward sell imbalances. The late imbalance support helped ES recover from its afternoon lows, though the close still finished just below the mid‑session range.

Overall sentiment remains neutral‑to‑slightly positive, with buyers defending dips but unable to extend rallies convincingly. The heavy MOC buy imbalance underscores institutional support into the close, suggesting underlying demand even amid intraday weakness. Heading into the next session, the market appears to be in digestion mode, awaiting fresh catalysts while holding above key prior settlement levels.

 

Dan @ GTC Traders

PPI August 2025: Headline Misses … But Inflation Persists

In a few moments, Inflation Metrics for the Consumer will be released.

But I thought this morning it might be a good idea to point out a few key points from yesterday’s August Producer Price Index (PPI) report.

The headline numbers read that final demand edged down 0.1 percent month-over-month … far below expectations of a 0.2 percent rise. On an annual basis, it climbed 2.6 percent, a slowdown from July’s 2.7 percent. At first glance, this might suggest inflation is easing.

But the headline is not the full report. In my experience? 99.9% of the individuals you meet will not dig into a report. They simply accept whatever the headline tells them the report says.

Dig deeper, and the data begins to tell a far more expansive story than a simple headline. Inflation remains embedded … with signs of acceleration in key areas.

Remember, the headline final demand PPI measures prices sellers receive for goods, services, and construction, essentially output prices. It’s not a direct gauge of input costs, those “upstream” pressures that often foreshadow consumer inflation. For that, look to intermediate demand indexes … which track prices for inputs at various production stages.

Stage 4 intermediate demand offers a clear view, prices for inputs into products nearly ready for final sale. In August, this index rose 0.5 percent month-over-month, pushing the 12-month advance to 3.1 percent. That’s the highest annual increase since March 2023 … or pre-pandemic, November 2018. Such acceleration in late-stage inputs signals building cost pressures, ones that could soon filter into consumer prices if not checked.

Breaking down the headline: The 0.1 percent decline was driven by services, which fell 0.2 percent … the largest drop since April. Trade services margins tumbled 1.7 percent, led by machinery and vehicle wholesaling (-3.9 percent). But goods told a firmer tale. Final demand goods inched up 0.1 percent, the fourth straight advance. Core goods (less foods and energy) rose 0.3 percent, steady pressure. Nondurable core goods jumped 0.5 percent month-over-month … think tobacco products (+2.3 percent) and processed poultry.

Elsewhere in intermediate demand, processed goods rose 0.4 percent, the fifth consecutive increase, with a 2.6 percent annual gain … the largest since January 2023. Aluminum mill shapes surged 5.5 percent, diesel fuel and electric power also climbed. Unprocessed goods dipped 1.1 percent, but that’s volatile … and the 12-month rise was 3.0 percent.

A brief summary:

  • Core final demand (less foods, energy, trade): +0.3 percent MoM, +2.8 percent YoY … the biggest annual jump since March.

  • Stage 4 inputs: +3.1 percent YoY, accelerating.

  • Goods components: Firm … with nondurables leading.

We’ve warned before: Inflation is structural, rooted in labor constraints, supply bottlenecks, and policy rigidities. The Fed’s rate cuts risk reigniting it … especially with core measures firm. Will high prices finally crimp demand enough for a slowdown? Time will tell, but these data suggest the battle isn’t won.

Until next time, stay safe … and trade well.

 

Technical Edge

Fair Values for September 11, 2025

  • S&P: 5.4

  • NQ: 24.79

  • Dow: 29.92

Daily Breadth Data 📊

For Wednesday, September 10, 2025

NYSE Breadth: 44% Upside Volume
Nasdaq Breadth: 59% Upside Volume
Total Breadth: 58% Upside Volume
NYSE Advance/Decline: 52% Advance
Nasdaq Advance/Decline: 47% Advance
Total Advance/Decline: 49% Advance
NYSE New Highs/New Lows: 148 / 35
Nasdaq New Highs/New Lows: 364 / 81
NYSE TRIN: 1.25
Nasdaq TRIN: 0.59

Weekly Breadth Data 📈

For the Week Ending Friday, September 5, 2025

NYSE Breadth: 52% Upside Volume
Nasdaq Breadth: 58% Upside Volume
Total Breadth: 55% Upside Volume
NYSE Advance/Decline: 60% Advance
Nasdaq Advance/Decline: 51% Advance
Total Advance/Decline: 54% Advance
NYSE New Highs/New Lows: 274 / 49
Nasdaq New Highs/New Lows: 442 / 264
NYSE TRIN: 1.35
Nasdaq TRIN: 0.76

 

BTS Levels:

ESU2025

The bull/bear line for the ES is at 6541.50. This is the critical level for directional bias today. Trading above it favors the bulls, while remaining below keeps the door open for sellers to press lower.

Currently, ES is trading around 6547.50, holding slightly above the bull/bear line. If this strength continues, upside targets include 6565.25 as near-term resistance, followed by the upper range target at 6578.25. A sustained breakout above these levels could push toward 6612.50.

On the downside, initial support comes in at 6532.25 and then at 6522.50. Below that, the lower range target sits at 6504.75. A breakdown through this area would open the path for sellers to drive toward deeper support near 6470.25.

Overall, intraday bias tilts bullish as long as ES holds above 6541.50. However, failure to sustain this level would shift momentum back toward the lower supports..

NQU2025

The bull/bear line for the NQ is at 23,892.50. This is the key pivot that must be reclaimed and held for bullish momentum to continue. Currently, NQ is trading around 23,919.50, showing early strength just above the bull/bear line.

On the upside, the first resistance comes in at 24,044.25, followed by 24,077.75, the upper range target for today. A break and hold above this zone would likely open the door for a push toward 24,252, the next major resistance level.

On the downside, immediate support sits at 23,877.75 and 23,785. If price slips below these levels, the next downside target is 23,707.25, today’s lower range target. A breakdown through there could extend losses toward 23,533.

Overall, the trend remains constructive as long as NQ can hold above 23,892.50. Sustained trade above the bull/bear line favors the bulls, while failure to hold it would quickly shift momentum back to the downside.

 

Calendars

Economic Calendar Today

This Week’s High Importance

Earnings:

Released

 

Trading Room News:

Polaris Trading Group Summary: Wednesday, September 10, 2025

Cycle Day 3 brought strong bullish continuation early, with a clean and effective execution of the 3-Day Cycle play, leading to a highly productive trading session for PTG members. The day was marked by a mix of disciplined setups, clean technical triggers, and excellent follow-through on both long and short opportunities.

Morning Session Highlights

  • Early Bullish Momentum:
    The initial upside targets (6535–6540) were already fulfilled pre-RTH, signaling strong carryover strength from overnight trading.

  • Manny’s Break/Retest Long triggered early:

    • Entry: 6530–6532

    • Target Zone Hit: 6538–6546

    • Manny held a long from 6532, though he missed an ES setup at the Globex open due to not being at his desk.

  • PPI Data (8:30 AM):
    Stronger-than-expected numbers fueled further bullish sentiment:

    • PPI MoM: -0.1% vs. 0.3% expected

    • Core PPI also beat expectations
      Result: 3-Day Cycle Targets of 6555 and 6563 were achieved shortly after.
      David called it “another fantastic 3 Day Cycle sequence.”

Educational Nuggets & Insights

  • Manny on Trading Mindset & Market Structure:

    • Emphasized the difficulty and respect futures demand.

    • Warned against overtrading: “Your probability of success declines with every additional trade.”

    • Great quote: “The number one job of any trader isn’t to trade. It’s to understand and respect that futures markets weren’t built for day traders.”

  • Precision of Algos & FIBs:

    • Several members remarked how precisely price responded to 1:1s and FIB clusters.

    • Manny pointed out a potential breakout above 6550 with GEX positioning as a catalyst, which played out nicely into a +5 move.

Midday – Bearish Shift & Consolidation

  • As the Initial Balance (10:30 ET) was marked, David noted a bearish shift in market structure.

  • Price retraced and filled the Gap to 6536.25, with bears taking short-term control.

  • Members discussed setups around a potential long from ~6500s, but it failed to hold as expected due to lunchtime chop.

Afternoon Session – Full Circle & Downside Completion

  • The “clock” cycle continued to play a role, with Manny calling a low pivot into 2:30 PM.

  • David returned from break noting that bears had control and that the Gap Fill was completed.

  • Notably:

    • Open Range Short play on NQ came full circle as all lower targets were hit.

    • David emphasized that the 3-Day Cycle targets marked the top — even posting a chart calling it “Pure VooDoo.”

End of Day – MOC Action & VWAP Close

  • MOC Buy Imbalance: Initially $2.4B, but paired down to $900M, eventually cleaning up into the close.

  • Price returned to VWAP zone into the bell.

Key Takeaways & Lessons Learned

  • 3-Day Cycle strategy once again delivered strong, reliable results.

  • Patience and discipline in trade selection were rewarded.

  • Fib zones and breakout levels were respected by price action.

  • Manny’s macro-level insights were a reminder of the professionalism and mindset required to trade futures.

  • Afternoon reversal reminded traders of the importance of adjusting bias as new data (IB break, gap fill, etc.) emerges.

Positive Trades Emphasized

  • Break/Retest Long from 6532 — Executed cleanly early.

  • Breakout above 6550 into 6560s — GEX-flavored squeeze.

  • NQ Open Range Short — Full downside target completion.

 

DTG Room Preview – Thursday, September 11, 2025

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Disclaimer: Charts and analysis are for discussion and education purposes only. I am not a financial advisor, do not give financial advice and am not recommending the buying or selling of any security.
Remember: Not all setups will trigger. Not all setups will be profitable. Not all setups should be taken. These are simply the setups that I have put together for years on my own and what I watch as part of my own “game plan” coming into each day. Good luck!
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