Michael Jensen
Hello, everyone Yesterday’s pullback was driven by multiple pressures converging, not a single trigger. Alongside earnings-related volatility and failed breakouts at record highs, markets also reacted to rising geopolitical risk, with expectations growing that the U.S. could be preparing military action against Iran. No confirmed strikes — but markets price probability, not headlines, and that probability clearly rose. At the same time, policy uncertainty added another layer. Reports that Kevin Warsh could be nominated as Fed Chair were interpreted as an attempt to restore credibility after recent USD weakness. His hawkish reputation doesn’t imply imminent tightening, but it does signal limits to how far policy expectations can be stretched, which markets had been leaning on heavily. The stress was visible across asset classes. $GOLD and $SILVER plunged sharply, not because risk had disappeared, but because positioning had become crowded and leveraged. When volatility spikes, even perceived safe havens get sold to meet margin calls. In contrast, oil prices moved higher, reflecting geopolitical risk rather than economic optimism — a classic late-cycle warning signal. Equities showed hesitation, not panic. $NSDQ100 pushed to 26,150, flushed to 25,400, rebounded, and is now stabilizing near ~25,600. Resistance sits at 25,900–26,150, while 25,500–25,400 remains the key support zone. $SPX500 stalled just below 7,000, dropped to 6,868, rebounded, and is consolidating near ~6,910. Near-term resistance lies at 6,950–7,000, with 6,880–6,870 as the first important support. Big tech weakness — especially $MSFT (Microsoft) — amplified index selling, highlighting how concentrated positioning has become. When leadership stocks wobble and geopolitical risk rises, markets become more sensitive very quickly. Bottom line: This is hesitation near extremes, not a trend reversal. But it is a market that demands confirmation, discipline, and patience. Clear & Simple Recap Markets pulled back because several risks hit at the same time. Geopolitical tensions increased uncertainty, gold and silver were forced lower by deleveraging, oil rose on conflict risk, and big tech dragged indices after failing to hold new highs. None of this signals panic — it signals re-pricing of risk. This appears to be a pause for reassessment, not a breakdown. Have a great weekend all
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