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Ahead of the Curve provides analysis and insight into today's global financial markets. The latest news and views from global stock, bond, commodity, and FOREX markets are discussed. Rajveer Rawlin is a PhD and received his MBA in finance from the Cardiff Metropolitan University, Wales, UK. He is an avid market watcher, having followed capital markets in the US and India since 1993. His research interests include capital markets, banking, investment analysis, and portfolio management, and he has over 20 years of experience in the above areas, covering the US and Indian markets. He has several publications in the above areas. He currently teaches business and management students at CHRIST University. The views expressed here are his own and should not be construed as advice to buy or sell securities.

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Monday, 10 March 2025

Market Signals for the US stock market S and P 500 Index and Indian Stock Market Nifty Index for the Week beginning March 10

 

Asset Class

Weekly Level / Change

Implication for S & P 500

Implication for Nifty*

S & P 500

5770, -3.10%

Bearish

Bearish

Nifty

22553, 1.93%

Neutral **

Bullish

China Shanghai Index

3373, 1.56%

Bullish

Bullish

Gold

2914, 2.30%

Bullish

Bullish

WTIC Crude

67.04, -3.90%

Bearish

Bearish

Copper

4.71, 3.56%

Bullish

Bullish

CRB Index

301, -0.25%

Neutral

Neutral

Baltic Dry Index

1400, 13.91%

Bullish

Bullish

Euro

1.0832, 4.40%

Bullish

Bullish

Dollar/Yen

148.03, -1.71%

Bearish

Bearish

Dow Transports

15610, -2.35%

Bearish

Neutral

Corporate Bonds (ETF)

108.32, -1.18%

Bearish

Bearish

High Yield Bonds (ETF)

96.11, -1.04%

Bearish

Bearish

US 10-year Bond Yield

4.30%, 2.44%

Bearish

Bearish

NYSE Summation Index

-42, -129%

Bearish

Neutral

US Vix

23.37, 19.05%

Bearish

Neutral

S & P 500 Skew

140

Bearish

Neutral

CNN Fear & Greed Index

Extreme Fear

Bullish

Neutral

Nifty MMI Index

Greed

Neutral

Bearish

20 DMA, S & P 500

5977, Below

Bearish

Neutral

50 DMA, S & P 500

5982, Below

Bearish

Neutral

200 DMA, S & P 500

5733, Above

Bullish

Neutral

20 DMA, Nifty

22749, Below

Neutral

Bearish

50 DMA, Nifty

23158, Below

Neutral

Bearish

200 DMA, Nifty

24056, Below

Neutral

Bearish

S & P 500 P/E

28.84

Bearish

Neutral

Nifty P/E

20.05

Neutral

Bearish

India Vix

13.47, -3.16%

Neutral

Bullish

Dollar/Rupee

87.10, -0.42%

Neutral

Neutral

 

 

Overall

 

 

S & P 500

 

 

Nifty

 

Bullish Indications

7

7

Bearish Indications

13

11

 

Outlook

Bearish

Bearish

Observation

 

The S&P fell, and the Nifty went up last week. Indicators are bearish for the week.

Markets have topped. Watch those stops.

On the Horizon

US – CPI, PPI, UK – GDP, Japan – GDP

*Nifty

 

India’s Benchmark Stock Market Index

Raw Data

Data courtesy stockcharts.com, investing.com, multpl.com, nseindia.com, tickertape.in

**Neutral

Changes less than 0.5% are considered neutral

 


The S&P fell, and the Nifty rose last week. Indicators are bearish for the week. Markets are topping. We are transitioning from an inflationary regime to a deflationary one. The sentiment is fearful, and risk-reward is poor at these levels as divergences develop. Carry trade liquidation may resume quickly, as the S & P is below the 200 DMA near 5700. The macro environment is rapidly deteriorating. Markets may bounce from oversold levels, and rallies may terminate soon on the S & P. The Nifty has corrected significantly from recent highs and will likely underperform.

The past week saw US equity markets fall. Most emerging markets rose even as interest rates rose. Transports fell. The Baltic dry index rose. The dollar fell. Commodities were little changed. Valuations are expensive, market breadth has fallen, and the sentiment is fearful. Fear (S&P 500) was back in vogue.

After this rally, a currency crisis should resume and push risky assets to new lows. Despite the recent inflationary spike, deflation is in the air, and bonds are telegraphing just that. It feels like a 2008-style recession trade has begun, with a potential for a decline in risk assets across the board. The current market is tracking closely the 2000 moves down in the S&P 500, implying a panic low right ahead in the upcoming months (My views do not matter; kindly pay attention to the levels). A dollar rally is a likely catalyst.

The S&P 500 is correcting from recent highs. We have bounced from recent lows without capitulation. This suggests the lows may not be in, and the regime has changed from buying the dip to selling the rip. We may get a final flush down soon. Risky assets should continue breaking to the downside as earnings growth peaks. The Fed has aggressively tightened into a recession. Deflationary busts often begin after major inflationary scares. The Dollar, commodities, and bond yields are flashing significant warning signs.

Global yield curves have inverted a second time after the recent steepening, reflecting the arrival of a significant economic slowdownThis inversion following the recent steepening of the yield curve, after the first inversion, is a precursor to the next recession, and the riskiest assets will underperform going forward under such conditions. 

The critical levels to watch for the week are 5780 (up) and 5760 (down) on the S&P 500 and 22650 (up) and 22450 (down) on the Nifty. A significant breach of the above levels could trigger the next big move in the above markets.  High beta / P/E will get torched again and likely be a sell on every rise. Gold increasingly looks like the asset class to own over the next decade (short-term resistance at 3000). Gold exploded almost eight times higher over the decade following the dot-com bust in 2000. Imagine what would happen to gold as this AI bubble bursts. You can check out last week’s report for a comparison. I love your thoughts and feedback.

 

 

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My belief is that stocks are relatively overvalued compared to bonds and attractive buying opportunities can come along after 1-2 years. In a deflationary scenario no asset class does well other than U.S bonds, the U.S dollar and the Japanese yen, so better to be safe than sorry with high quality government bonds and fixed deposits. Cash is the king always. Of course this varies with the person's age.