SP500 LDN TRADING UPDATE 9/10/25

WEEKLY & DAILY LEVELS

***QUOTING ES1! CASH US500 EQUIVALENT LEVELS SUBTRACT ~60 POINTS***

WEEKLY BULL BEAR ZONE 6720/10

WEEKLY RANGE RES 6791 SUP 6640

OCT EOM STRADDLE 6602/6891

OCT MOPEX 6842/6487

DEC QOPEX 6303/7025

DAILY VWAP BULLISH 6749

WEEKLY VWAP BULLISH 6655

DAILY MARKET STRUCUTRE - BALANCE 6741/6803

DAILY BULL BEAR ZONE 6780/70

DAILY RANGE RES 6860 SUP 6745

2 SIGMA RES 6918 SUP 6688

VIX DAILY BULL BEAR ZONE 18.5

TRADES & TARGETS

LONG ON TEST/REJECT DAILY BULL BEAR ZONE TARGET DAILY RANGE RES

SHORT ON TEST REJECT DAILY RANGE RES TARGET DAILY BULL BEAR ZONE

LONG ON TEST/REJECT OF WEEKLY  BULL BEAR ZONE TARGET DAILY BULL BEAR ZONE

(I FADE TESTS OF 2 SIGMA LEVELS ESPECIALLY INTO THE FINAL HOUR OF THE NY CASH SESSION AS 90% OF THE TIME WHEN TESTED THE MARKET WILL CLOSE AT OR BELOW THESE LEVELS)

GOLDMAN SACHS TRADING DESK VIEWS

This generation thrives in an era of abundant liquidity, as Mario Draghi aptly describes it. It’s also a generation of Momentum Junkies. The essence of momentum lies in diversifying between alpha and beta, yet Momentum Junkies often chase beta.

In global macro, 2023 has been a year dominated by beta rather than alpha. Few have the patience or creativity to anticipate the next move in the market, but being long on beta across various forms has proven profitable—and likely will continue to do so.

FOMO (Fear of Missing Out) is particularly painful—not just losing money, but watching others make “easy money” while you’re sidelined. If the market aims to deceive the majority, expect a step-function trade: a significant upward or downward move, with upward being more probable. This is why long volatility trades can succeed; convexity can yield rewards.

Inflation: A Basket Problem

Inflation isn’t a singular, absolute figure—it’s about what’s in your personal inflation basket versus Core PCE. Governments treat inflation as universal, but it’s far from that. Official CPI, often used in labor contracts, creates an illusion of protection against inflation. However, this protection is partial, and negative compounding erodes it over time—especially damaging during periods of high inflation, like 2021.

Consider the disparity in compensation: an IBD associate in 2024/25 earns less than even the “weakest” Lehman associates did in 2007. Today’s average front-office associate salary is $184k, compared to Lehman’s $311k back then. That’s deflation.

Ken Griffin may assert tariffs inflation isn’t reflected in prices, and he’s probably correct, but the focus should remain on individual baskets. If your basket includes private school fees, luxury cars, insurance, and whiskey, you’re likely feeling inflation—but your assets are inflating too. If your portfolio is up 20% on MSCI World while inflation rises 15%, you’re effectively deflating by 5%.

The Hockey Stick Phenomenon

Momentum Junkies aren’t fazed by inflation; they focus on hockey stick charts—price lines that suddenly surge after a calm period. Copper, gold, palladium—these assets exemplify the hockey stick trend. Stay invested in what you favor and ride the momentum. When a dip occurs, capitalize on it.

The challenge is that low-income groups can’t benefit from the hockey stick. Inflation disproportionately impacts them, eroding their purchasing power.

The Fed and Market Dynamics

The Federal Reserve currently plays a less pivotal role. Hiking rates by 75 bps didn’t trigger a recession. Transmission mechanisms aside, the evidence is clear. Markets, not central banks, are the true forcing mechanism for policymakers. While USDJPY hasn’t fully reached that point, the direction is correct.

The overarching theme is that perception of fundamentals matters more than fundamentals themselves. Success isn’t about the cards you hold but the cards on the table. To profit, read the market, understand consensus, and do the opposite.

Healthcare stocks, for instance, present a mean-reversion opportunity but also align with TACO trades—Trade Trump And Clone Opportunities.

Ride the Fastest Horses

Focus on the fastest-moving assets. Palladium’s breakout is another example of an asset responding to debasement. Gold is performing exceptionally well: 44% annualized return, 2.4x Sharpe ratio, 8% peak-to-trough drawdown, and zero drawdown from breakout entry. You’re not too late. When bubbles emerge, seize the opportunity—add fuel to the fire.

The DXY chart remains crucial. While the base case suggests a range-bound scenario, it’s worth monitoring closely for potential breakout signals.