Why U.S. stocks turned lower: Federal Reserve policy and the CPI report
U.S. stocks opened higher, then turned lower, leaving all three major indexes in the red. Early gains faded as traders reassessed inflation risks and the policy path. Repricing late in the session is common when macro catalysts eclipse optimistic opens.
The central bank’s reaction function remains a dominant driver. When CPI report outcomes complicate the timing or size of policy moves, risk assets can surrender opening strength. That reassessment can be magnified by positioning and liquidity.
According to Thomas Martin, Senior Portfolio Manager at GLOBALT, unresolved questions around inflation, employment, and policy can undercut gains even after strong earnings. That dynamic helps explain why macro narratives can overpower single-company news during the trading day.
What an intraday reversal signals for market sentiment
An intraday reversal, from green at the open to red by the close, often reflects a swing from risk appetite to risk control. It can signal profit-taking near resistance, sensitivity to policy headlines, or skepticism about stretched valuations.
Strategists describe the tape as waiting on decisive evidence. “The market is more at a crossroads and waiting for some sort of a bullish or bearish catalyst to push it in a new direction,” said Sam Stovall, Chief Investment Strategist at CFRA.
According to Larry Tentarelli, Chief Technical Strategist at Blue Chip Daily Trend Report, a single reversal is less meaningful than a series of them, especially if leadership narrows and valuations remain elevated. Persistence, not one-off volatility, is the risk signal.
How the S&P 500 and peers behave on reversal days
On reversal days, the S&P 500 often masks divergences beneath the surface as megacap strength fades and breadth weakens. The Nasdaq tends to be more sensitive to high-multiple names, while the Dow can appear steadier due to heavier defensive weightings.
Reversals commonly coincide with stalls near prior highs, intraday failed breakouts, and late-day selling into the close. Breadth metrics and volatility gauges can confirm the shift when advancing issues lag and the VIX firms.
What to watch next: catalysts and risk signals
CPI and jobs from the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics
CPI and employment reports are official gauges that shape the policy debate. Headline versus core inflation, revisions to payrolls, and labor participation trends can sway rate expectations and feed intraday reversals.
Yields, breadth, VIX, and sector leadership during reversal days
Watch Treasury yields for policy repricing, market breadth for participation, the VIX for demand for protection, and sector leadership for durability of trends. Deterioration across these signals tends to make reversals stickier.
FAQ about intraday reversal
Which catalysts most often trigger these reversals, CPI, jobs report, Fed speeches, or earnings?
Inflation and jobs data can dominate, while central bank commentary and earnings guidance shape follow-through. The mix, timing, and surprise versus expectations often determine whether gains fade.
Does an intraday reversal signal a healthy correction or a broader trend change?
On its own, a reversal can be a healthy reset. A series of reversals alongside weakening breadth, rising volatility, and narrowing leadership may indicate a more material trend shift.
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Source: https://coincu.com/markets/sp-500-reverses-intraday-as-cpi-keeps-fed-cautious/