When Doing the Right Thing Becomes Bad News
Here's a sentence you don't hear often: The stock market is panicking because the Federal Reserve might make a responsible decision. Tech stocks are taking a beating as investors come to terms with the possibility that the Fed won't cut interest rates in December just because markets want them to.
The Invesco QQQ Trust (QQQ), which tracks the Nasdaq 100, has dropped into its first support zone and is making lower lows compared to previous dips. More tellingly, it's given back the gains from the government reopening euphoria with remarkable speed. The RSI indicator shows the index is oversold, which typically precedes a bounce, but the broader picture is unsettling for bulls who've gotten used to easy money.
What makes this pullback unusual isn't its magnitude but its timing. Historically, this kind of correction happens in September or October. Instead, we're seeing it unfold in November, which suggests something different is at play this time around.
Four Fed Presidents Walk Into a Bar
That something is the Federal Reserve, or more specifically, four Fed presidents who've decided to speak some uncomfortable truth. Goolsbee, Musalem, Collins, and Schmid have all indicated they don't support a December rate cut. Read that again: Four voting members are publicly pushing back against what the market has been pricing in as a near-certainty.
The market had built its recent rally on two pillars: artificial intelligence hype and the expectation of increasing liquidity with looser financial conditions. A key part of that equation was the assumption that the Fed would cut rates in December regardless of whether economic data justified it. Wall Street had essentially bet that political pressure and market tantrums would force the Fed's hand.
Now those four Fed presidents are standing in the way, and the stock market is troubled that despite intense political pressure, these officials have the backbone to advocate for sound monetary policy. It's worth noting the irony here: Markets are selling off because policymakers might actually pay attention to economic data rather than stock prices.
That said, the probability of a December rate cut still sits above 50%. Investors shouldn't get carried away in either direction. The smarter play is focusing on the data itself. And here's where timing becomes crucial: Due to the government shutdown, we've been flying blind on economic indicators. Now that Washington is functioning again, a torrent of delayed data is about to hit. Producer Price Index and retail sales numbers that should have been released are still pending. This information vacuum is about to end, and the flood of data will likely determine the market's direction.
NVIDIA Takes Center Stage
Before all that data arrives, though, there's one event that could single-handedly shift market sentiment: NVIDIA Corp (NVDA) earnings on November 19. Given NVIDIA's outsized influence on market psychology and its role as the poster child for AI investment, the company's results and guidance will serve as a critical near-term indicator for tech stocks broadly.
The Momentum Crowd Gets Crushed
While headline indexes are struggling, the real carnage is happening in the momentum trade. Accounts that aggressively bought call options on cryptocurrencies and highly speculative stocks are getting obliterated. Many of these traders are completely blown out.
Even those who stuck to momentum crowd favorites are feeling intense pain. Stocks like Oklo Inc (OKLO), AST SpaceMobile Inc (ASTS), IREN Ltd (IREN), Robinhood Markets Inc (HOOD), and CoreWeave Inc (CRWV) are experiencing forced selling as margin-fueled positions trigger liquidation requirements. When you're leveraged to the hilt and the tide goes out, you find out who's been swimming naked.
Magnificent Seven All See Red
Most portfolios today are heavily concentrated in the Magnificent Seven tech giants, which makes daily money flows in these stocks particularly important. The news isn't good: Early trading shows negative money flows across the board.
Apple Inc (AAPL), Amazon.com, Inc. (AMZN), Alphabet Inc Class C (GOOG), Meta Platforms Inc (META), Microsoft Corp (MSFT), NVIDIA (NVDA), and Tesla Inc (TSLA) are all showing outflows. When all seven mega-cap tech leaders are moving in the same negative direction, it's hard for broader indexes to find footing.
Money flows are similarly negative in SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY) and QQQ, confirming the broad-based nature of the selloff.
Gold and Silver Drop on Responsibility Fears
Even precious metals aren't finding safe haven status. Gold and silver are being sold on the same concerns plaguing equities: that the Fed might not do the wrong thing. These metals typically benefit when the Fed maintains loose policy beyond what economic conditions warrant. If the Fed actually exercises discipline, that's bearish for gold.
For investors tracking these markets, SPDR Gold Trust (GLD) is the most popular gold ETF, while iShares Silver Trust (SLV) dominates silver exposure.
Bitcoin's Brutal Day
Bitcoin (BTC) is experiencing its own reckoning. When Bitcoin was trading at much higher levels, whale investors were quietly exiting positions. Now the selling has gone mainstream.
Bitcoin ETFs saw $870 million in outflows yesterday, marking the second-largest single-day exodus on record. The reason? The same concern hitting everything else: tighter financial conditions if the Fed doesn't cut rates. Bitcoin's price action has been driven largely by liquidity and loose financial conditions. Remove that support, and the digital currency struggles to maintain altitude. As of now, Bitcoin is trading around $95,000, well off its recent highs.
Predictably, Bitcoin promoters are out in force, trying to convince retail investors to double down at these levels. That's always worth noting when an asset class is under pressure.
What Investors Should Consider
In this environment, holding good long-term positions while maintaining adequate protection makes sense. That protection can come in the form of cash, Treasury bills, tactical trades, or hedges of various durations depending on individual risk tolerance.
Investors who are older or more conservative should consider higher protection bands. Those who are younger or more aggressive can operate with lower protection levels. If you're not using hedges, your cash position should be higher than if you were hedging, though not as high as cash plus hedges combined.
A protection band of 0% would indicate full investment with maximum bullishness. A protection band of 100% would signal maximum bearishness requiring aggressive hedging or short positions. Most investors should be somewhere in between based on their circumstances.
It's worth remembering that you can't take advantage of new opportunities if you're not holding sufficient cash. When markets eventually stabilize and attractive entry points emerge, you'll want dry powder available.
For those adjusting positions, consider using wider stops on remaining quantities, particularly for high-beta stocks that move more dramatically than the broader market. Partial stop quantities can help manage risk while maintaining exposure.
The Bond Question
For traditional 60/40 portfolio advocates, the current environment doesn't favor long-duration strategic bond allocation when adjusted for probability-based risk reward and inflation.
Those committed to the classic 60% stocks and 40% bonds split should focus on high-quality bonds with durations of five years or less. More sophisticated investors might consider using bond ETFs as tactical positions rather than strategic core holdings in the current environment.
The Road Ahead
Market direction from here depends on several factors converging over the next week. The upcoming data releases will clarify whether the economy is running too hot to justify rate cuts. NVIDIA's earnings will provide insight into AI spending sustainability. And Fed officials will continue speaking, either reinforcing or backing away from their hawkish stance.
What's clear is that the market's assumption of automatic monetary easing is being challenged. Investors who built positions based on the certainty of December rate cuts are now scrambling to adjust. Those who maintained flexibility and adequate cash positions are better positioned to navigate whatever comes next.
The pullback, while uncomfortable, represents a normal part of market cycles. What makes it noteworthy is the reason behind it: fear that the Federal Reserve might actually do its job properly. That's not typically what triggers selloffs, but in a market that's become accustomed to accommodation, responsible monetary policy feels like a threat.