You finally got the dead cat bounce in bitcoin, all the way to 94K last week, but the bounce has been fading . Bitcoin continues to trade heavy, and it being one of the best indicators of risk appetite, is a bearish factor. BofA client flows show retail being net sellers for the past 4 weeks, a big change from their behavior during past dips, and also the past 52 weeks, where they have been the biggest net buyers.
Hedge funds continue to show that they don't believe in this market, as they quickly went back to selling stocks after being heavy buyers during the weakness in November. CTAs and vol target funds sharply reduced equity exposure in November, and have only slightly bought back some of what they sold. DBMF, the biggest trend following ETF, shows a much smaller S&P 500 position now than what it was during June through October. Those systematic funds slowly adding back long exposure is supportive for stocks in the short term.
Big picture, retail investors are very heavily allocated to stocks. They've been buying aggressively since mid 2024. Recent activity seems to indicate that they are close to saturation. Their stock allocation is the highest since 2021. There is a lot of downside when this bull market ends. Its just a matter of how long the topping process takes. Best guess is that it started in late October, and the process will last for 5 to 6 months. Bitcoin seems to be acting like a canary in the coalmine for the stock market.
There are mixed signals out there. Sold the remaining longs last week, and now on the sidelines. I don't see much of an edge at current levels. The November pullback shook out a decent amount of weak hands, with put volumes going up and retail investors selling. That shake out could be enough to sustain a rally into the year end. On the other hand, bitcoin is trading very weak relative to the SPX, and retail investors seem to be low on ammo, with many retail favorite stocks much closer to their November lows than their October highs.
The most likely scenario is that we get a grind higher to the end of the year, making a marginal new all time high (SPX 6950-7000). Then I would expect a selloff in January from a mix of delayed capital gains related selling, and a lack of bullish catalysts. If the Supreme Court doesn't make a decision on Trump tariffs by year end, that would make it trickier to short in January, as that is probably the biggest positive catalyst left for this market. But I would expect the Supreme Court to make their decision this month, because delaying it just creates a bigger headache unwinding and refunding the tariffs.
FOMC is the big event this week, but also have AVGO and ORCL earnings which will be a good barometer for risk appetite in AI related names. A hawkish 25 bps cut is mostly priced in. I expect Powell to do what he usually does, which is talk about data dependency, be mealy mouth and non-committal. It is absurd to talk about a hawkish rate cut. Its like jumbo shrimp. Forward guidance is a joke. I expect the market to see through any hawkish tone, realizing that they got another 25 bps cut, and steepen the yield curve and probably rally stocks. Not a high conviction view, however.
It is interesting to see 10 year yields go up last week even though you had rumors that Kevin Hassett is likely the next Fed chair, and you had weak jobs data (ADP, Challenger). It appears the bond market is seeing through the weakness and expecting a rebound in the economy in coming months. Also, overseas yields on the long end in Europe and Asia is putting some pressure on long bonds in the US. All else being equal, higher yields is bad for stocks. But that may be offset by the coming OBBA Trump stimmies in the first half of 2026. Overall, not much to do here. Watching and waiting.













































