The S&P 500 index closed 0.14% higher on Monday, nearing its record high of 6,290.22. Nvidia’s decision to resume chip sales to China led futures higher, pushing the index towards a new peak.
The S&P 500 is set to open 0.4% higher following the Consumer Price Index (CPI) release, which met expectations at +0.3% month-over-month. This week, the market anticipates bank earnings, with focus also on ASML, TSMC, and Netflix reports.
Investor Sentiment Analysis
Recent sentiment data shows 41.4% of individual investors are optimistic, despite potential signs of a topping pattern forming. The NASDAQ 100 closed 0.33% higher and is expected to rise 0.5%, driven by Nvidia’s premarket surge.
The Volatility Index (VIX) dropped to 15.70 on Thursday but increased to 17.85 yesterday, reflecting possible market uncertainty. A low VIX suggests potential market reversal risks.
S&P 500 futures hit a near 6,350 record following the CPI data. The index remains consolidated, balancing around resistance near 6,350 and support around 6,300.
Crude oil dropped 2.15% on Monday, settling near $67, influenced by geopolitical developments. Oil prices adjusted as market fears of supply shocks eased. Despite geopolitical tensions, OPEC maintained its oil demand growth forecasts, with support for crude between $65-66.
Trading Strategies and Considerations
While the market’s push towards all-time highs commands attention, we believe the truly telling action for traders is happening beneath the surface. The jump in the Volatility Index is not just a flicker of uncertainty; it’s a signal. We see this as a classic setup where complacency at the index level masks rising anxiety among options traders. The CBOE’s total put/call ratio, a key gauge of sentiment, has recently climbed to 0.98, moving from a neutral stance to one that clearly shows market participants are actively buying downside protection. Historically, a VIX rising off a low base while the market makes new highs is a divergence worth heeding. For us, this means it’s time to pay for protection. We are looking at buying out-of-the-money puts on the SPY and QQQ ETFs, not as a bearish bet, but as inexpensive insurance on our long positions heading into a spate of crucial earnings.
The upcoming reports from key semiconductor and streaming players present a clear opportunity to trade the volatility itself. We know that implied volatility consistently swells ahead of such binary events. Rather than guessing the direction of the post-earnings gap, we are structuring long strangles on individual names we expect to move significantly. This strategy profits from a sharp price swing in either direction. The current market consolidation, trapped between that firm support and resistance, feels like a coiled spring. Data from the last earnings cycle showed that the average one-day post-earnings move for Magnificent Seven stocks was 4.7%, far exceeding the broader market’s volatility. We anticipate a similar, if not greater, reaction this time around, making these pure volatility plays particularly attractive.
The drop in crude oil adds another layer to our strategy. While some view it as a sign of slowing global demand, we see it as a disinflationary tailwind that could keep the Federal Reserve on the sidelines. This complicates an outright bearish stance. The fact that analysts have been forced to upgrade their S&P 500 earnings forecasts for the fourth quarter, with the consensus now sitting at a 2.4% year-over-year growth rate, up from just 1.5% a month ago, supports the bull case. This fundamental strength clashing with technical nervousness suggests range-bound action is also a high probability. Consequently, we are also selling iron condors on the S&P 500, a strategy designed to profit if the index remains between its well-defined support and resistance levels through the coming weeks of earnings announcements.