CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 69% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.
CFDs are complex instruments and come with a high risk of losing money rapidly due to leverage. 69% of retail investor accounts lose money when trading CFDs with this provider. You should consider whether you understand how CFDs work and whether you can afford to take the high risk of losing your money.

Nasdaq analysis: Nvidia-fuelled tech rally pauses, but what now?

Article By: ,  Market Analyst
  • Nasdaq analysis: Nvidia topped $2 trillion valuation in first for chipmakers, but rally lost steam Friday
  • S&P 500 and Nasdaq hit fresh record highs before easing back
  • Magnificent 7 stocks’ charts point to caution  

 

Nasdaq analysis: Tech rally stalls as investors take profit

 

Last week saw equities display mania-like symptoms in Germany and other mainland European markets, as well as Japan, and a few other places. But it was nothing compared to the US, where one single stock (obviously, you know which one) was responsible for a vast majority of the gains for major indices. Nvidia’s blowout earnings results fuelled fresh buying frenzy on Wall Street, where the S&P 500 surpassed the 5,100 milestone for the first time to set a new record. The Nasdaq hit a fresh all-time high on Friday, as Nvidia’s valuation topped $2 trillion, becoming the first chipmaker to achieve this feat. However, as the session wore on, tech stocks started to ease back, before closing near their lows. This caused the major US indices to post some not-so-bullish looking candles on their charts, suggesting we could see some weakness on Monday.

 

Nasdaq analysis: What’s next for stocks?

 

Thursday saw Nvidia experience a remarkable one-day surge. The rally propelled its market capitalisation to $277 billion, marking the largest single-session increase in value ever recorded, surpassing Meta's recent $197 billion gain. But after the not-so-strong close on Friday, this has raised question marks about the potential sustainability of this tech-driven rally and its ability to extend across other sectors. Investors are wondering what the diminishing expectations for Federal Reserve rate cuts, fuelled by robust data indicating continued strength in the world's largest economy, may mean for stocks going forward. With over-stretched price-to-earnings ratios, many stocks in the tech sector are at risk of giving back some gains. Yet, so far, every dip has been bought, pointing to insatiable appetite for risk. Let’s see if that changes in the week ahead.

With most of the earnings now out of the way, the odds of early rate cuts slashed, and equity benchmarks hitting record highs in a period which historically has not been great for the markets, even the most bullish investors may feel that a correction, even if it turns out to be a small one, is warranted. In a healthy bull market, some give back is never a bad thing.

 

Magnificent 7 charts point to caution

 

The rally in stocks moderated on Friday, as investors presumably took profit on their long positions that they had accumulated during the week, knowing full well there is always the possibility of a correction at these elevated levels.  Traders are now left wondering, whether to continue buying any small dips they see, or start looking for shorting opportunities once there is a concrete bearish signal to work with. Looking at the charts of the big tech giants, Friday’s price action does warrant some caution for the week ahead.

 

 
  • Nvidia closed near Thursday’s close on heavy volume, as investors presumably took profit. The bearish close is a warning that Monday could see some profit-taking after the eye-watering gains, potentially weighing on the US indices.
  • Tesla also closed near its lows, inside a bear flag pattern. A break below the support trend could give rise to some technical selling in the days ahead.
  • Meta has had some difficulty clearing resistance around $485/6 area and it was again unable to posit a close above that level on Friday. So, a bit of a correction may be on the cards. The bullish trend has been very strong, though.
  • Microsoft formed a bearish engulfing-like candle on its daily chart Friday, suggesting that it could head back down towards $400, and further work off its “overbought” conditions before it potentially moves again.
  • Apple stock held below the bearish trend line and the 21-day exponential moving average, as it continues to trade inside a descending triangle pattern. Key support at $180 is still holding.

 

 

Nasdaq technical analysis

The Nasdaq formed an inverted hammer on the daily time frame on Friday, which is a warning sign that the bullish trend may have reached an exhaustion after a relentless rally. It definitely calls for bullish caution but is not necessarily an indication that the market has topped. The bears need to see a lower low form below last week’s low at 17315, before they can become confident that a peak has been reached. Standing on the way of that level is key support at 17660. This is the area the bulls will need to defend this week if they want to maintain this bullish trend and lift the Nasdaq to a new all-time high.

However, if that 17315 level breaks down, then a potential drop to test the December high at 16970 could be on the cards, with the November 2011 high coming at 16769.

So, as minimum, I am expecting to see a small pullback this week but have clear plans in case the bears take charge. For now, we can only assume that the retreat is a normal pullback you see in a healthy bullish trend. Let the charts guide you and leave emotions and what “should” happen aside.

 

Source for all charts used in this article: TradingView.com

 

-- Written by Fawad Razaqzada, Market Analyst

Follow Fawad on Twitter @Trader_F_R

 

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