Daily stock market analysis, trade alerts, and trading education from Ross Givens and the Traders Agency team.
The only thing on the economic calendar this morning was the usual weekly jobless claims. They showed a marginal increase from last week, coming in slightly ahead of expectations. Nothing major there.
The strong bull market of the past few years has “trained” many people to just keep buying the dips. As a whole, that’s been a pretty good play. But when do you NOT want to buy the dip?
Ray Dalio The Changing World Order Why every empire follows the same script — and where the US sits right now Legendary investor Ray Dalio published research titled Principles for Dealing with the Changing World Order, which has garnered 135 million views. Dalio is a billionaire and an optimist. He’s a student of history who […]
Nothing on the economic calendar today – just a bunch of Fed speeches. Let’s see how markets have been moving.
The strong bull market of the past few years has “trained” many people to just keep buying the dips. As a whole, that’s been a pretty good play. But when do you NOT want to buy the dip?
We got more consumer confidence data this morning and despite so much doom-and-gloom talk, it came in significantly stronger than expected. Let’s see how markets have been moving.
The major indices are lying to you. Pull up the NASDAQ or S&P 500 right now. You’ll see a whole lot of nothing. Both have been stuck in a holding pattern for months – chopping around near the highs with zero real advancement.
The results of the 2025 Congressional Trading Report are in. These aren’t slight outperformance numbers. They’re statistical anomalies that would get any normal citizen investigated.
The latest data on the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge – the PCE index – came out this morning. The annual numbers came in at 3% annually – in line with expectations – but a clear sign that inflation is still trending very much above target.
It’s the last week of what has been a very choppy, sideways February for the broader markets. I don’t expect that to change this week. But when we “slice” the market a bit more, a different picture emerges.
It’s the last week of what has been a very choppy, sideways February for the broader markets. I don’t expect that to change this week. But when we “slice” the market a bit more, a different picture emerges.
The latest data on the Fed’s preferred inflation gauge – the PCE index – came out this morning. The annual numbers came in at 3% annually – in line with expectations – but a clear sign that inflation is still trending very much above target.
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