Headline: Stocks Stall as December Fed Cut Odds Waver; S&P 500 Holds Key Support
U.S. equities are treading water as traders weigh the near–50/50 odds of a Federal Reserve rate cut in December. With policymakers split and inflation progress uneven, the market is increasingly sensitive to incoming labor and price data. The November jobs report, due just days before the next FOMC meeting, is shaping up as the swing factor that could tip the balance of expectations.
A softer labor market or cooler inflation would likely revive risk appetite and bolster the S&P 500, while resilient data could prompt a hawkish repricing and pressure stocks. On the daily chart, the index continues to respect a major trendline that has repeatedly attracted dip buyers. A sustained bounce from this area keeps the door open to fresh all-time highs; a decisive break lower would embolden sellers and expose the 6,541 area as the next downside objective.
Lower timeframes echo this push-pull. The one-hour chart shows minor support near 6,745, where buyers may defend for a move toward 6,900. A clean breakdown below that support would shift focus back to the broader trendline as bears seek momentum for a larger breakout. With limited clarity on the four-hour view, attention turns to upcoming catalysts: ADP employment data, FOMC meeting minutes, the monthly Nonfarm Payrolls and jobless claims, and U.S. flash PMIs—each with the potential to reset rate-cut probabilities and steer near-term market direction.
Key Points: – Market pricing for a December Fed rate cut sits just below 50%, keeping stocks range-bound. – The November NFP report is likely to be the decisive input ahead of the next FOMC meeting. – Soft labor or inflation data would support risk assets; stronger prints risk a hawkish repricing. – S&P 500 daily chart: buyers continue to defend a key trendline; a break could target 6,541. – 1-hour view: support near 6,745; upside scenario points to 6,900 if buyers hold the line. – Key data ahead: ADP employment, FOMC minutes, NFP, jobless claims, and U.S. flash PMIs.






