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Tonight's Wall Street battle between bulls and bears: even scarier than the hot non-farm payroll will be the sizzling CPI?
Compared to the hot non-farm payrolls, what Wall Street perhaps least wants to see right now is the scorching CPI. With last Friday's non-farm payrolls already giving the USA market quite a shock, everyone may be watching tonight to see whether the USA market will surge into even more tumultuous waves on CPI night...
Daily Options tracking | The implied volatility of the quantum computing "monster stock" RGTI has soared to 242%, with a Call position earning tenfold returns; Tesla's Call ratio has risen to 66%, and large investors have spent over 0.4 billion dollars on
On the last trading day, MSTR rose over 4%, with an Options Chain volume of 0.47 million contracts, and the implied volatility increased to 111%; on the Options Chain, there is a standoff between bulls and bears, with the highest Trade volume for the 400 dollar strike price call expiring this Friday at 0.016 million contracts.
Absolutely significant: "The most important inflation data in recent memory"! This scene may suddenly strike the Global stock and bond markets.
Investors and traders are highly focused on the December Consumer Price Index (CPI) data set to be released on Wednesday, as this data may significantly impact the trends in Stocks and Bonds markets.
S&P 500 Still Dependent on Tech to Drive Growth This Season: Barclays
If the USA CPI achieves five consecutive increases tonight, will the Federal Reserve press the pause button on interest rate cuts?
Forecast analysts predict that the USA Consumer monthly report will show an increase for the fifth consecutive month.
"Concerns about technological monopolies" are increasing, and weighted ETFs like S&P are becoming popular.
In the second half of last year, Invesco's S&P 500 Equal Weight ETF attracted approximately $14.4 billion, bringing its total inflow for the year to $17 billion, far surpassing the record inflow set in 2023. Analysts believe that investors are currently most concerned about concentrated risks, fearing that the market is too top-heavy. It is expected that this year, apart from the largest technology companies, other companies will achieve double-digit growth in earnings.