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U.S. Market Recap–July 29

Signs of Exhaustion Emerge as Broad-Based Declines Hit Equities

· Market Memo

On Tuesday, July 29, U.S. stocks extended their ongoing technical consolidation. The S&P 500 slipped 18.91 points (-0.3%), while the Nasdaq Composite dropped 0.38%, both indices opening higher but fading throughout the session in a “gap up–sell off” pattern. Despite the mild pullback (indexes held above their 5-day moving averages), over 6,000 stocks closed in the red, suggesting that actual market sentiment was significantly weaker than the headline numbers.

1. Index Action: Technical Consolidation Confirmed, 5-Day MA Becomes Critical

Tuesday’s session confirmed the ongoing theme of “post-rally technical adjustment.” Both the S&P 500 (-0.3%) and Nasdaq (-0.38%) remained above their short-term 5-day moving averages, aligning with earlier expectations for a controlled pullback.

Structure matters: The “gap-up followed by intraday weakness” reflects a cooling of investor enthusiasm at elevated levels. As long as no decisive breakdown occurs (i.e., a >2% drop), the underlying trend remains resilient.

Under the surface: The modest index drop masked a sharp internal deterioration—broad-based weakness among prior leaders in tech and AI underscores rising caution among funds and retail investors.

2. U.S.-China Trade Talks Extended: Awaiting Trump’s Final Word

Markets were particularly sensitive to developments in the ongoing U.S.-China negotiations in Stockholm. The two sides agreed to extend the existing tariff ceasefire but left key terms—especially the duration—undecided, pending final input from the Trump administration.

Current status:

  • U.S. tariffs on Chinese goods remain at 30%
  • China maintains 10% tariffs on U.S. imports

Key risk: If Trump rejects the tentative extension or imposes additional tariffs, markets could react sharply to a breakdown in expectations. Conversely, a confirmed extension might offer temporary relief for risk assets.

3. Fed Policy Outlook: Cooling Labor Market, but Rate Cut Odds Still Low

1) Job Market Weakness – A Catalyst in the Making?

The U.S. Labor Department reported a decline in job openings in June—from 7.71 million to 7.44 million (below the 7.5 million consensus)—indicating a cooling labor market.

Implication for the Fed: A weaker labor market could lead to higher unemployment, prompting eventual Fed cuts. However, the market still sees little chance of an immediate pivot:

  • July rate cut odds: just 2.1%
  • Further clues will depend on upcoming non-farm payrolls and CPI prints

2) Fed Meeting Preview: Could Dovish Language Be a Lifeline?

The FOMC convenes tomorrow (July 30). The base case is a hold on rates, given political pressure and persistent inflation. Should the Fed surprise with a cut, the market may rally initially—but later worry about Fed independence.

Watch Powell’s tone: Markets will focus on whether Powell signals that a rate cut could come later this year if economic data aligns—potentially bolstering risk appetite.

4. Big Tech Earnings: Meta and Microsoft to Steer the Index

This week’s highlight is the earnings season for mega-cap tech stocks. The so-called “Magnificent Seven” have accounted for over 50% of the S&P 500’s year-to-date gains, making their earnings crucial to market direction.

Meta (Q2 Preview):

  • Revenue: $44.73 billion
  • EPS: $5.90
  • Surprise history: 4–5 consecutive beats

Key focus: Whether AI-driven product improvements translate to higher engagement and ad revenues—particularly as digital ad growth may face pressure from global tariffs. The stock has consolidated after a 49% rally and needs a strong beat to regain upward momentum.

Microsoft (Post-market Q2 Preview):

  • Revenue: $73.81 billion
  • EPS: $3.37

Key focus: Growth in AI-related cloud revenue. Microsoft continues to expand capex in AI infrastructure, making Azure's performance a focal point. After mixed reactions to past earnings, this release may reset short-term sentiment.

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Visit our official site: www.trade-hermit.com.This content is protected by copyright and may not be reused without explicit authorization from tradehermit.

5. Covered Call ETFs (e.g., QYLD): Yield over Growth in a Sideways Market

Funds that employ covered-call strategies—such as QYLD—are attracting investor interest:

Strategy:

  • Hold Nasdaq-100 stocks (e.g., NVIDIA)
  • Sell OTM call options to collect premiums
  • Result: income enhancement, limited upside, partial downside hedge

Market Signal: The $31.5 billion in YTD inflows reflects widespread sideways market expectations—investors aren’t betting on strong rallies or crashes but prefer steady income with capital preservation.

6. Risk Pockets: Healthcare, Insurance, and Stablecoins

1) Healthcare – Novo Nordisk Plunges 20%

Novo Nordisk slashed its full-year guidance due to:

  • FX headwinds (weaker Danish krone)
  • Wegovy demand slowdown (losing share to Eli Lilly)

New guidance:

  • Sales growth: cut from 12–18% to 8–14%
  • Operating income growth: reduced to 10–16%

Sentiment has turned sharply against the stock in the near term.

2) UnitedHealth – Post-Earnings Uncertainty

UNH reported Q2 revenues of $111.6 billion (in line) but EPS of $4.08 (missed expectations), with a net margin of just 3%.

Risks:

  • Ongoing DOJ investigation (details undisclosed)
  • No earnings guidance provided
  • Support zone: $247–250
  • Patience needed: bottoming process may take 6+ months, with potential black swans ahead

3) CRCL (Circle) – Volatility Amid Policy Setbacks

CRCL (Circle) trades at a $40B valuation, with USDC circulation at $63.8B. Its share price is down sharply from its $66.7B peak (at $298/share).

Bearish factors:

  • “Talent Act” failed to grant exclusive stablecoin issuance rights

Bullish support:

  • Coinbase investment
  • Strategic partnerships (e.g., Fidelity)

Conclusion: Likely oversold, but highly volatile. Consider “grid trading” approaches for short-term opportunities.

Conclusion: A Market in Search of Clarity Amid Event Risks

The market’s small pullback alongside broad-based weakness reflects growing caution at elevated levels. Investors are now watching three key catalysts:

  1. FOMC Meeting (July 30): Can dovish hints reignite risk appetite?
  2. Mega-cap Tech Earnings: Meta and Microsoft (tomorrow), Nvidia and others to follow
  3. U.S.-China Talks: Will Trump approve the deal or trigger a tariff shock?

Strategy: Stay patient. Wait for these events to play out before taking directional bets. For high-flying tech names, beware of “sell the news” scenarios. For beaten-down names like CRCL, volatility may offer entry points—but only with risk control in place.

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