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“What’s your hurry? Because now is the only time there ever is to do a thing in.” – Uncle Tom’s Cabin, Harriet Beecher Stowe

Morning stock market summary

Below is a snippet of commentary from today’s Morning Lineup. Start a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium to view the full report.  

From the FOMC’s interest rate announcement through the end of Chair Powell’s press conference, the S&P 500 steadily rallied higher. Almost exactly when Powell stopped speaking, though, stocks started to weaken, and they closed well off the intraday highs. The post-presser weakness has continued this morning as S&P 500 futures are down about 35 bps while the Nasdaq is down half a percent. There’s not much in the way of a catalyst to point to for this morning’s weakness, but overnight Asia was lower, and European stocks are also in the red. ECB President Lagarde commented that 25% tariffs on US imports of European goods would knock 0.3 percentage points from Eurozone economic growth in the first year of their implementation while an escalation would only exacerbate those impacts.

There are several economic reports on the calendar this morning, including jobless claims and the Philly Fed report at 8:30 followed by Leading Indicators and Existing Home Sales at 10 AM. On the sentiment front, the weekly survey from AAII showed that bearish sentiment came in at 58.1%. That marks the fourth straight week of readings above 55% which has never happened in the survey’s history (since 1987), and it’s only the seventh time that bearish sentiment has been above 50% for four or more straight weeks.

It’s not often that you get a setup where just about all of the major US indices rally more than 1% over the last week and yet every single one remains in oversold territory. After the plunge in stocks during the first two weeks of March took all the major index ETFs into ‘extreme’ oversold territory as of last week, the rally we have seen since last Thursday’s close has only been enough to move them merely into oversold territory, and based on where futures are trading now, they’re on pace to remain oversold today.

The last four trading days were a welcome respite from the barrage of selling, and it was the first time since the February peak that the S&P 500 traded higher three times in a four-trading day span. With that pause in the selling, the S&P 500 is looking to find some semblance of stabilization from what has practically been a straight down leg lower.  Stabilization doesn’t mean immediately reversing and trading in a straight line higher.  Usually, it takes a period of back-and-forth churning before the market can gain enough energy to stage a rally. Looking at the chart, bulls hope that is exactly what the S&P 500 is doing now, but only time will tell.

With such a steep drop lower in the last month, it’s hard to remember that the S&P 500 had another leg lower from late 2024 and into early 2025 when the S&P 500 pulled back just over 4%. Back then, it seemed like a meaningful pullback, but not so much now.