Wall Street flying blind
US stock indices were higher across the board on Wednesday, ahead of yesterday’s Thanksgiving holiday. This marked their fourth successive positive session, which has helped the majors recoup most, if not all, of the losses from earlier this month. But traders returned this morning to find that there was an outage at CME Group, the world’s biggest exchange operator by market capitalisation. This meant no pricing in US stock index futures, gold, 10-year Treasuries and WTI Crude.
The CME said it was working to fix the issue, and, at the time of writing, it looks as if some futures markets are coming back online. But if this proves to be wrong, traders will have to wait until cash markets open later this afternoon to find out where prices really are.
For what it’s worth, it looks as if equities may see a mild bid when they reopen, adding to gains made since last Friday. If so, this may prove to be the best week for US stock indices since late June.
Despite this week’s rebound, November has still been a challenging month. Elevated valuations, particularly across tech and those at the forefront of the Artificial General Intelligence (AGI) trade, have tempered enthusiasm. As things stand, the S&P 500 and Dow sit marginally lower for November, while the NASDAQ is around 2% below where it closed out October. Only the small cap, domestically focused Russell 2000 looks as if it will post a positive November.

Source: TN Trader
The trigger for the bounce-back was a renewed bout of dovishness from several Federal Reserve members. This helped to boost the probability of a 25-basis-point rate cut next month from 30% last week to 85% on Wednesday. But aside from this, investors will be keeping a close eye on Nvidia.
Stock in the chip designer fell from a record closing high of $210 at the end of last month to below $170 on Tuesday, for an overall decline of 19%. The selloff was triggered by some high-profile selling. But there are also concerns that Nvidia finally has some serious competition.
Meta Platforms, one of Nvidia’s high-profile customers, is talking to Google about using its proprietary tensor processing units in Meta’s data centres. The news sent Alphabet’s (Google’s parent company) share price soaring to new all-time highs. This would suggest that the AGI trade is still working. But it could simultaneously signal that Nvidia’s near-monopoly on high-end chips is coming to an end.



















