Hello traders,
The market spent last week in a holding pattern. As a futures trader, I can tell you this type of action is as important as the big moves.
The E-mini S&P 500 closed Friday at 6,467.25, just a few points lower than the previous session. That capped off a week of consolidation with price holding between 6,461.50 and 6,508.75. For me, that range is the battlefield, and until it breaks, the market is telling us to stay patient.
Dow futures slipped modestly while Nasdaq futures fell a bit harder, reflecting the same hesitation.
What really matters here is the reaction to the hot producer price index.
The number came in at 3.3 percent year-over-year, far above the expected 2.4 percent. Normally, that type of upside surprise in inflation would spark more selling.
Yet ES futures are holding above 6,400. When you see resilience like that, it usually means institutions are sitting on bids, waiting to absorb weakness.
This bounce looks clean, but underneath, it’s all positioning, not conviction. This is how I trade when sentiment runs hot but structure hasn’t confirmed the story.
Looking forward, all eyes are on Jackson Hole this Friday.
For those who are not yet updated on what that is, let me tell you. Jackson Hole is the annual Jackson Hole Economic Policy Symposium, hosted every August by the Federal Reserve Bank of Kansas City. It takes place in Jackson Hole, Wyoming, and has been running since 1978.
It is one of the most important global gatherings for central bankers, finance ministers, academics, and market participants. Powell’s speech is the catalyst that could break this range. Traders will be dissecting every word for clues on the September rate decision.
Alongside that, housing data will serve as a temperature check on the real economy. Housing starts on Tuesday and existing home sales on Thursday could add fuel to the fire.
The Fed paused. The market roared. While everyone watched for a policy pivot, futures traders caught the real move as tech earnings lit up the tape. This is how you stay ahead of the headlines.
Technically, ES is showing classic consolidation near record highs. The multiplier effect on these contracts means every single point matters. With over a million contracts traded on Friday alone, the participation is there, but conviction is not. That tells me we are coiling for a move.
Outside equities, the divergence in commodities is striking.
Gold rallied to $3,335 as traders sought protection against sticky inflation.
Oil, on the other hand, dropped toward $63, a sign of lingering demand concerns.
This split shows the market is unsure whether to fear inflation or slowdown more.
I see a market balanced on a knife’s edge. Discipline is key.
Position sizing must reflect the fact that the next major headline could be the one to break us out of this tight range. Jackson Hole will likely set the tone, and traders who respect the consolidation will be the ones ready when the move finally comes.
See you in the next one.
Imre Gams
Editor, The Trading Room