It was one of those mornings where nothing was technically breaking… but everything felt coiled. The S&P bounced cleanly off the 100-day moving average, semis caught a bid on a massive AI infrastructure deal, and then geopolitics crept back into the headlines before most traders finished their coffee. We’re range-bound, headline-sensitive, and waiting on the next real catalyst. That’s not an investor’s paradise — it’s a tactical battlefield.
Key Takeaways
We’re Still Stuck In A Range — And It Shows
- The S&P continues ping-ponging between upper and lower VWAP deviations with no sustained conviction. Up, down, up, down — no structural shift.
- Momentum readings across major indices remain flat to slightly negative. There’s no broad participation pushing this higher.
- The 100-day moving average held — for now. But without a catalyst, this market drifts rather than trends.
- Range-bound markets reward precision. Breakouts fade. Breakdowns bounce. Structure matters more than story.
AI Spending Isn’t Slowing — It’s Concentrating
- A massive chip deal between Nvidia and Meta Platforms reinforces that hyperscalers are still deploying capital aggressively.
- This strengthens semis while software remains pressured — the long semis / short software trade has been dominant.
- Meanwhile, Palo Alto Networks cut guidance despite beating earnings, reminding us it’s about forward expectations, not backward numbers.
- AI capex will continue — until it can’t. When liquidity tightens or ROI questions intensify, that’s when repricing happens.
Geopolitical Tail Risk Is Back On The Table
- Headlines suggesting rising tension with Iran briefly rattled futures, though oil’s reaction was muted.
- If escalation becomes real, energy and defense stocks move first — not the indices.
- Names like RTX Corporation and Kratos Defense & Security Solutions continue to show smooth momentum tied to structural military spending.
- Modern warfare spending is shifting toward drones and AI systems — that’s where the durable capital is flowing.