Fed Day likely Marks a Turning Point For the Rally Based on Historical Trends

Samwise Quick Reference Handbook
To streamline our daily blogs and conserve space, we’ve organized key resources into a convenient, collapsible dropdown menu below. A sort of Quick Reference Handbook if you will -- as our friends in aviation might call it. By clicking the menu below, you’ll have qu...

Please login to view this page.

5 1 vote
Article Rating
29 Comments
Oldest
Newest Most Voted
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Mercury Vapor

If we get a pop on the market to 600 or so after the fed (seems very unlikely unless we see a reversal here) are we primed for the 500 puts or shall we just wait until later this year to buy them? My mental target is SPX 7000 for the next rally. In some ways i think getting a pop and extended rally duration (end of october type stuff) and price to QQQ 610+ might doom the market for the rest of the year.

Florian

Hey Sam, you said yesterday there would be ramifications from this rally. What do you mean by that exactly? That it could initiate a bear market or that you would adjust your investment strategy?

Also, a week ago you said that if the rally won’t exceed prior records by a significant margin (120+) it’s in the expected range and not at all special. This might be semantics and not really important but this week you called the rally insane etc. Has anything changed your view?

Angela

Is rally duration a more telling parameter than rally size? Or I guess, does the rally duration put a cap on the rally size? In this case, the rally duration is on the high end but still within expectations like you stated above, but the rally size is still well below Covid and the dot-com. However, to match Covid returns, the duration would need to extend a lot longer, and that hasn’t happened in history before and so we shouldn’t count on it. Is that the right way to think about these parameters?

First Name

Trade out even $1.80 makes sense

Edwin

I like the idea of trading out as an insurance policy of sorts in case the FED initially results in a strong rebound on QQQ and NVDA. If there’s a strong rebound, we’ve freed up capital and can buy back in. If we continue lower, then we’re already well positioned for a downturn with our QQQ put spreads AND there’s a chance NVDA may still rebound slightly even in a correction. Or why not sell half rather than all?

nahidwin

@Sam, if you close out the NVDA puts, at what point would you buy back in (with a later expiration and/or higher strike)?

Would you target a specific price or RSI or – let’s assume there will indeed be an oversold bounce – how would you try try to limit the risk of getting sidelined if the bounce falls short of e.g. midline RSI?

Florian

Sounds reasonable to sell NVDA. On the other hand none of the short term trades since last March have gone our way really. The market has been really tricky, so my confidence is not super high I have to say..

First Name

When are we going to trade out of NVDA?

Florian

Hey Sam, is that just your gut feeling or some other reasons as well that lead you to believe that?

Frankfurter

QQQ closed at 590.00 exactly! Not that it’s a new high or anything, but I thought that was cool

Angela

Hey Sam,
I still don’t quite understand why buying the Sep 2026 $500 puts ahead of time is advantageous to the previous method of going long at a correction bottom and purchasing the hedges on the rebound. Even if we are at extremes, the rally can still extend longer as you have mentioned. Since we cannot time a top, wouldn’t it just be better to wait for the correction and then hedge later? Especially since the purpose of the long-term puts is to serve as a hedge and not really expecting to churn out a big profit from them (although it would be a bonus if they did). If we are going to be 70-80% in cash and 20-30% in puts in the case of Arryn, it seems to me that we would just be shorting the markets, i.e. what exactly are we hedging if we are mostly in cash? I understand that if a correction were to happen at around the $600 mark, the hedges would serve us well, but in the event that this rally truly becomes overextended as it has already proven itself to be, the puts would just be subject to theta decay. On top of that, Arryn is already in long-term and short-term puts that would allow us to capitalize in the event of a correction even without the addition of these new ones.

Last edited 2 months ago by Angela
Edwin

Angela, I’m sure Sam will share his insights in more detail; however, I suspect the reason we want to enter our put position now is because we know we’re nearing the top whether it’s right here at 592 or at 600 or even 610. I suspect we want to capitalize on buying the puts at the market top so that we can sell near the correction bottom for a substantial profit. Also, if I recall correctly, Sam noted that when we go long at the correction bottom we are essentially naked without any hedge protection. Entering the puts now near the top ensures we profit at the correction bottom and have plenty of cushion when we decide to go long again.

Laslo Brusnjai

Since we cannot time a top…

And what makes you so sure we can time the bottom?

Angela

I’m not saying I’m sure that I can time a bottom. No where in my post implies that. Sam has mentioned consistently before that it’s easier to time a bottom than to time a top. I am just simply laying out my concerns which Sam has responded to.

Edwin

Looking at QQQ trading in the 592’s in after-hours despite touching down on 584 earlier today is quite the disappointment. One thing I’m sure of is the correction will be quite spectacular when it finally unfolds.

Edwin

the quicker we hit 600, the better, because there shouldn’t be much penetration into the 600’s if any ????

First Name

596 just like 588 counts as attempt at $600, look how weak it’s been after open. NVDA too.

Frankfurter

With a new ATH at opening, it’s officially tied for the longest (non-melt-up) rally!

Todd

NVDA banned from China? TIME TO RIP!

Edwin

Good one haha… hopefully we see a reversal soon. The rip this morning has been nasty.

Karl Peak

The market seems to be welcoming the news!

NeverGonnaLetYouDown

QQQ is overbought on the hourly, daily and WEEKLY.

Frankfurter
Scroll to Top