Lanceljx
02-10 21:09

This rebound does not yet qualify as a durable risk-on turn. It has many hallmarks of a positioning reset, not renewed conviction.


The scale of the bounce in the S&P 500 looks impressive on the surface, but the underlying signals are less convincing. Elevated implied volatility, below-average participation, and the sharp move in Goldman’s short-bias basket all point to short covering and mechanical flows, rather than long-only re-engagement. When rallies are led by what investors were forced to buy back, rather than what they want to own, follow-through tends to be fragile.


The AI angle matters here. The market is increasingly questioning winner-takes-most dynamics, especially in software, where pricing power, differentiation, and customer lock-in are far less assured than in AI infrastructure. That uncertainty caps multiple expansion and encourages tactical trading rather than sustained allocation.


So is this a dead cat bounce?

Not necessarily. It is better described as a tradable relief rally inside a broader consolidation, with asymmetric risks still skewed to the downside if macro or earnings disappoint.


Would I add stocks now?

Only selectively:


Add quality leaders with clear cash-flow visibility and balance-sheet strength.


Avoid crowded, narrative-driven software names where AI monetisation remains unproven.


Keep dry powder. A convincing uptrend requires improving breadth, falling volatility, and volume confirmation, none of which are in place yet.



In short, this is a market to scale, not chase. Treat strength as an opportunity to rebalance positioning, not as confirmation that the uncertainty has cleared.

No Cuts Until July? A Volatile Ride For Market?
January nonfarm payrolls came in at 130K vs. 55K expected, while unemployment ticked down to 4.3% (vs. 4.4% forecast). The initial optimism faded fast: the Dow slipped 0.13%, the Nasdaq fell 0.16%, and the S&P 500 closed flat. Job gains were heavily concentrated in healthcare (+124K), raising questions about breadth. Traders quickly pushed the first Fed rate cut expectation from June to July, with March cut odds collapsing and “no change” probability above 94%. Is a stronger labor market now a headwind for equities? Will delayed rate cuts cap upside in the near term?
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