Bespoke’s Morning Lineup – 6/24/25 – Crude’s Cruddy Reversal
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“I start early and I stay late, day after day, year after year, it took me 17 years and 114 days to become an overnight success.” – Lionel Messi
Below is a snippet of commentary from today’s Morning Lineup. Start a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium to view the full report.
Investors may have been puzzled by the lack of any material weakness to kick off the week yesterday, but news overnight of a ceasefire between Iran and Israel was likely what the market was sniffing all along. Following yesterday’s intraday rebound, equity futures are indicated to open sharply higher, even as they have given up some of their prior gains. The key to watch today will be how the market trades throughout the trading session. Can it build on the early gains, or will investors look to take profits?
Besides the Mideast crosscurrents, investors will also have to contend with some economic reports, including the 10 AM releases of the Richmond Fed Manufacturing report (expected to weaken modestly) and Consumer Confidence, which is expected to build on last month’s much better than expected report. Besides the data, several FOMC members are scheduled to speak, with the most notable being Chair Powell when he testifies at 10 AM to the House Financial Services Committee. We’ve already seen three members of the FOMC strike a more dovish tone than Powell (Bowman, Goolsbee, and Waller), so will he dig in his heels or strike a more dovish tone? There’s only so long that tariff-induced inflation can be a ‘tomorrow’ story.
After rallying as much as 1.3% intraday yesterday on the back of a rally in crude oil, the S&P 500 Energy sector sold off over 4% on an intraday basis in what turned into a wild intraday range, even in a sector known for its volatility. The result was what technicians call an outside day, where the intraday high exceeds the intraday high of the prior session while the intraday low is below the prior day’s intraday low. Not only was yesterday an outside day for the Energy sector relative to the prior session, but it was also an outside day relative to the sector’s range over the prior five trading days! This morning futures are continuing the weakness from Monday as WTI trades down over 3.5% to just under $66 per barrel.
Days when the Energy sector’s intraday range exceeds the trading range of the sector’s prior five trading days have been very uncommon. While there was another similar “Mega” Outside Day for the sector back in March, since 1990, there have only been six other such days. There was one in April 2024, but before that, you have to go back to October 2018 to find the next occurrence. The chart below shows each of those prior “Mega” Outside Days. Outside of the first two in May 2003 and March 2005, all of the other occurrences have taken place during the 10+ year period where the sector has essentially been rangebound as the sector is at the same levels now as it was in 2008.
Bespoke’s Morning Lineup – 6/23/25 – Anything Happen This Weekend?
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“At some stage therefore, we should have to expect the machines to take control.” – Alan Turing
Below is a snippet of commentary from today’s Morning Lineup. Start a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium to view the full report.
We can all give good rationalizations of why futures have seen such a muted reaction to the Iran news over the weekend, but isn’t that the way hindsight always works? If you had asked anybody to predict how markets would react to a US bombing of targets in Iran, no one would have said a gain of less than 1% in crude oil and no change in S&P 500 futures.
This morning’s muted reaction to the weekend’s events is also a microcosm of the market’s YTD performance. Heading into the final week of the first half, there has been no shortage of market catalysts and subsequent volatility, but here we are with the S&P 500 little changed (up less than 1.5%) on the year. Since WWII, 2025 ranks as just the 12th time (out of 81) that the S&P 500 has been up or down less than 2% heading into the final week of the first half.
The chart below shows the S&P 500’s performance during the last week of the first half in each year since 1945. Overall, the median performance has been a decline of 0.13%, with positive returns just 51% of the time, so it hasn’t typically been a positive week for stocks. More recently, performance has been even weaker with negative returns in nine of the last eleven years and a median decline of 0.29%.
The Bespoke Report – 6/13/25 – There’s Always Something
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Bespoke’s Morning Lineup – 6/13/25 – So Much for a Summer Friday
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“Being Irish, he had an abiding sense of tragedy, which sustained him through temporary periods of joy.” – WB Yeats
Below is a snippet of commentary from today’s Morning Lineup. Start a two-week trial to Bespoke Premium to view the full report.
If you were planning on a slow summer Friday, renewed tensions in the Middle East have damaged those plans this morning. Equity futures are off their overnight lows, but the S&P 500 is still indicated to open down by about 1%. The real action is obviously in the energy markets as crude oil trades sharply higher.
The US Oil Fund ETF (USO) is trading up over 7.5% in the pre-market, which would put it on pace for the sixth-largest opening gap to the upside since the ETF’s inception in 2006. It would also be just the 24th time that USO gapped up over 5%. In terms of the prior 7.5% gaps higher, USO continued higher from the open to close for a median gain of 2.1% and positive returns four out of five times. However, by the close of the following day, USO was down a median of 1.6% from the initial gap higher with declines three out of five times, and a week after that opening gap, it was down four out of five times for a median decline of 2.2%. Historically, at least, these sharp gaps higher haven’t had a lot of follow-through.
As far as the price of oil is concerned, this morning’s gap higher has helped to confirm what was already a break of the downtrend that had been in place since mid-January. It also cleared what could have been a formidable level of resistance in the $75 range.
As luck would have it, today is also Friday the 13th, and while the day has unlucky connotations, in terms of market performance, it has been anything but. Since its launch in 1993, the S&P 500 ETF’s (SPY) average daily change has been a gain of 3.9 bps, with gains 53.6% of the time. Fridays, however, haven’t been as positive as SPY’s average performance is unchanged, with gains 52.1% of the time. On the 53 prior Friday the 13ths, though, SPY’s median gain was 20 bps with gains 60% of the time, and on the four prior times that there has been a Friday the 13th in June, SPY’s median gain was 57 bps with gains three out of four times. Will investors buy the dip again and keep the positive June Friday the 13th vibes going?








