AI tide pulls everything higher

Asia traders stepped into the trading room this morning with that half-charged, pre-monsoon electricity — the kind of atmospheric tension that tells you the market is pretending to be calm even as everyone quietly braces for catalysts that haven’t hit the tape yet. Screens glowed with early bids in US futures, Nasdaq contracts drifting higher on sheer AI muscle memory, and Asia’s tech cohort catching the thermal updraft from Nvidia’s gravitational pull. The rest of the region moved with the uneasy shuffle of traders front-running a week nobody fully understands yet.

US equity futures — S&P up around 0.4%, Nasdaq +0.6% — traded like a market trying to sniff out the tailwinds before the storm front arrives (i.e., bad news is good news in a rate cut environment). SK Hynix and Samsung rode the AI-capex theme thanks to Korea’s renewed investment push, while Bitcoin clawed back from last week’s near-death experience, trading closer to $95k as if trying to reattach itself to the risk complex. But the broader MSCI Asia Pacific whispered a different story — two decliners for every gainer — and Japan sat firmly in the red after posting its first GDP contraction in six quarters. Layer that with China-Japan tensions hitting tourism and retail names, and you get a region where selective strength is doing most of the heavy lifting.

But all of this is just the overture. The real inflection point is the US data deluge finally coming back online after weeks of blackout. Employment. Pricing indicators. Activity gauges. An entire suite of macro signposts that traders have been forced to trade around, rather than with. With release calendars finally waking up, the market’s about to step out of a dimly lit room into full fluorescence. And that shift will drag the Fed’s December path back into the spotlight.

The hawkish breeze has already picked up — December cut odds have slipped below 50% as Fed officials lean away from another trim. The minutes from that unusually divided late-October meeting arrive this week too, promising more clues on the internal friction behind the quarter-point move. Traders can feel the push-pull: risk appetite is warming up just as the Fed messaging stiffens. That’s how volatility sneaks in — through the cracks between sentiment and policy.

And then there’s the supermassive object at the center of this week’s market orbit: Nvidia earnings. They’re the de facto rate decision for the AI complex — a “show me” moment for a stock up 42% this year and a valuation now living in thin atmosphere. Deliver, and the AI tide keeps floating this market into year-end. Miss, and risk assets could find out very quickly where the real liquidity pockets are — and aren’t.

Crypto adds another subplot. A month after its euphoric highs, Bitcoin’s Trump-trade sugar rush faded, and now it’s grinding back into the narrative, up about 1.5% today. But this week, even crypto feels like a passenger — not a driver.

Commodities offered another twist as oil slipped with operations resuming at Russia’s Novorossiysk port after last week’s strike-related shutdown. Meanwhile, Trump signaled he’s fine with sanctioning any country doing business with Russia. Markets didn’t expect that green light to shine quite so directly.

Japan’s economic contraction gives PM Takaichi political cover for a bigger fiscal firehose even as the BOJ inches toward a hike. In a normal cycle, that divergence would set off region-wide rotation trades. In this AI-dominated cycle, it’s mostly background noise — the equity universe remains gravitationally bound to Nvidia, the hyperscalers, and the multi-trillion-dollar capex wave powering the only global investment supercycle still accelerating.

So Asia trades today like a market caught in the gap between two incoming tides:

One macro — The return of the U.S. data firehose that will redraw the Fed map,One micro — Nvidia earnings, now treated like a central-bank-level event for global risk beta.

Everything else — geopolitics, Japan stimulus, Bitcoin’s mood swings, oil ripples — is garnish.
The core story is simple: traders are trying to front-run a week they can feel coming like thunder, hoping the AI tide keeps them afloat long enough for the macro fog to finally clear.

Finally, Tokyo has just handed global macro a riddle wrapped in a warning label. When the 20-year JGB blows out to its highest yield since 1999, the message isn’t subtle — the BOJ is running out of hallway, and every door now leads somewhere uncomfortable.

Behind Door A, you’ve got a bond market crisis

Behind Door B, you’ve got a currency crisis.

The uncomfortable truth? Japan may not get to choose its door. Markets might choose for them, and the rest of us will be trading the aftershocks.

According to Goldman Sachs, level matters (hard not to agree as the S&P is owned by MoMo code)

The fulcrum of the entire week is a single, painfully binary level: S&P 6,725. As Goldman’s Brian Garrett put it, keep that number on your launchpad — because below it, the S&P flips into negative trend for only the second time since February. That’s the line that separates “messy but manageable” from “trend mechanically turns south.”

And the timing could not be more charged. NVDA — the largest company on the planet — reports this week with an implied $300B swing wrapped into the options surface. At the same time, we finally get the first US employment report in 2.5 months, plus earnings from brick-and-mortar giants that have been bludgeoned lately (HD, WMT, LOW, TGT). This isn’t an earnings week, it’s a macro recalibration with a volatility spine running straight through it.

Flows are already speaking louder than any forward guidance. The VIX traded north of 23 — only the fourth time since April — and defensive hedges are quietly but aggressively being stacked. Two out of three CTA triggers broke last week. Momentum just posted one of its worst sessions in a decade. And Garrett notes something I agree is deeply revealing: he was asked for more CDS primers this week than in the last 10 years combined. Traders don’t brush up on CDS for fun; they do it when the plumbing feels like it’s creaking.

The tone around tech is shifting in a way only flows can reveal. Goldman’s sentiment poll still shows almost half of respondents expecting TMT leadership over 12 months — but prime brokerage data completely contradicts that hope. Short selling outpaced long buying in tech last week. Long-only demand rotated sharply into healthcare and staples. The healthcare chase was strong enough that the desk called it “a pursuit.” And critically, gross exposure hasn’t fallen despite the volatility pickup — investors aren’t derisking, they’re reshuffling.

Systematics look hair-trigger sensitive. The S&P has already cracked its short-term threshold twice in two weeks, only to be rescued by the closing bell. The NDX and the Russell 2000 actually broke theirs. Goldman’s models flag that CTAs may have to sell around 20% of their NDX and RTY holdings this week if the tape doesn’t rise. That is the quiet factor no one talks about until it hits the screens — and it’s exactly why 6,725 matters so much.

The derivatives desks echo the same anxiety. Downside hedging in megacap tech is surging. NDX vs SPX implied volatility is near one-year highs. NDX downside vol for the “average” stock trades at one of the richest multiples in two years. Garrett’s “vol stress” index sits at 8/10. This is not a market that feels comfortable under the hood.

And then there’s NVDA. Garrett highlights the stat that almost defies market physics: NVDA is now exhibiting more volatility than the average stock in the Russell 2000 — despite being 2,500x the size and infinitely more liquid. That’s a sign of a market where the center of gravity is vibrating at an unnatural frequency.

The thematic baskets add fuel to the concern. Goldman had warned that their custom baskets were significantly more volatile than the broad market; that divergence climaxed last Thursday with a brutal 750bps one-day drawdown in their momentum index. Yet exposure to momentum remains high — traders are still betting the same horse even after watching it stumble.

Put all of this together and the message is simple: levels matter again. Flows matter more. Sentiment is diverging from positioning. And psychology is shifting from “AI solves everything” to “don’t get caught holding duration risk inside the biggest equity trade on earth.”

Asia doesn’t need to overthink it today. Just watch 6,725. Because the moment that floor gives way, the machines don’t just sell — they flip the market’s entire script heading into year-end.