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Stock Markets Analysis & Opinion

Soaring Volatility Hints at Nervous Bulls Ahead of Key CPI Report: What to Watch

 

It was a mixed day of trading as rising implied volatility appeared to finally reach a level that was determinantal for stocks to continue to push higher.

You won’t see it on the VIX index, but you will see it when looking at an at-the-money 1-month Nvidia (NASDAQ:NVDA) option that climbed to 61.7% yesterday.

MSFT-Chart

It is a sight to behold, as it is not something you see like this often.

That rising IV in sync with the rising stock price is about as clear a sign as any as to what is happening with Nvidia’s stock, which is a frenzy and demand of call buying lifting the shares higher, and as a result the broader indexes with it.

NVDA Volume Chart

The move higher in IV of the stocks in the MAG7 and the S&P 500 got the Implied Correlations indexes higher for 1,3,9, and 12 months.1-Month Implied Correlation Index

The entire implied volatility term structure moved higher yesterday, with the biggest moves higher coming from the front of the curve, likely due to some hedging activity for the CPI report today.

It seems likely that IV should fall today once the CPI data is released unless there is a reason for implied volatility to rise following the report, which will depend on the data itself.SPX Index

Yesterday, we finally saw the rising wedge break, with an initial throwover that turned lower through the lower bound.

If it is a rising wedge that has officially broken, then we should see follow-through today and in the coming days, taking the S&P 500 back to the origin for the rising wedge to 4,850. After that, we will have to see what happens.S&P 500 Index-15-Minute Chart

The 10-year rate has not broken up and out, but I think today’s data and the data to follow the rest of the week will likely result in the 10-year either breaking out and moving sharply higher or moving back towards the 3.8% region.

The thing is that rates have a few chances to move lower, including a solid 10-year auction last week and favorable CPI revisions, but we haven’t seen rates move down either. So, my feeling is that bias is for rates to rise.US 10-Year Govt Bonds-Hourly Chart

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I will be back today with more.

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