A Professional Approach to Trading Futures

We will provide this information on a one time basis
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The importance of the 17 Week Bill Auction

*While secondary to the FOMC minutes, poor demand for the 17 week Bill (Auction) at 10am ET, has the potential to significantly move
the market. If demand is seen to be low, it will likely cause a spike in yields, which would then result in immediate selling pressure
on the Nasdaq and S&P 500 futures. The move lower would occur within a few minutes after the result is released (and we would "go with")
 
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Thanks TuscanSun for checking in (and of course for the "like")

Here is an interesting fact (for everyone). It is about a phenomenon known as
the "Overnight Drift" as researched by the New York Fed.

So first a professional note, for those who might want to become profitable traders
this game (and it is a competition) is all about finding and learning to make use of,
any and all, tradeable edges. This is ONE. There are others, and I am always searching
for these.

Making use of the tendency is up to the trader. I discovered that this algo works, not only
for this tendency but for many of the tradeable edges that form the basis of my hopefully
sustainable trading business.

I received a couple of skeptical comments saying that this is just a "statistical anomaly"
no kidding? I teach statistics, so for me this comical. I am not going into detail, but I can
tell you that it has survived the test of time. I will keep trading it (until it doesn't work).

Good luck
 

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Early trading was positive and the 17 week Bill Auction was well received so the market
moved up. We attach a chart showing the early move. Readers should see a familiar pattern as we
continue to use the Algo that has worked well for us in the past and continues now. As always the risk bar
is the third bar, and entry on the open of the next bar, then you hold and manage the trade.

Now the wait until FOMC minutes at 2pm ET
and we have our scenarios ready as shown below
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Dovish ShiftHeavy focus on labor "downside risks" & dissenters' views.Rally toward 6,950+
Hawkish PauseEmphasis on "solid" growth & tariff-driven inflation.Sell-off toward 100-day MA
Status Quo"Meeting by meeting" approach; no new timeline.Chop within existing range
[th]
Scenario​
[/th][th]
Fed Language​
[/th][th]
Likely ES Response​
[/th]​
Data as of February 18, 2026. The 10-year Treasury yield currently sits at 4.08%
 

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Thanks Again TuscanSun

Our chart frames the market referencing the MOC orders that occur at the same time
every (NY) session. For the broader market, those MOC "D orders" as they are known in
the industry) are reported at 3:50pm ET. IF the imbalance is significant, it signals that
price is likely to move in a specific way during the sessions that follow. Rather than rattle
on about this I will simply say that skilled professionals know this and use it to obtain an edge

The advantage we have is as follows.

1) Prior to the NY open of the S&P 500 Futures, we can (if the evidence is there) figure out
who is trapped and where the vulnerable inventory is staged
2) From this, we can guess which side is comfortable (in the money), which side is leaning
the wrong way and has to manage inventory that is losing money (losing more with each point
price moves away from their positions). At some point the losses trigger what we call a "give up"
bar. Its not a sudden move, rather it is a steady consistent move with similar volume or slightly
increasing volume bar after bar.
3) Traders familiar with this can spot it and they know (when) it is safe (low risk) to get on board and hold

New York Session Summary

On the first bar of the NY session, price dropped, convincing traders to sell. Sell volume was trapped early.
Near the end of the Euro/US Overlap, institutions moved the "Marked Up" inventory back down to retest the lows,
making a profit both ways. Institutional traders call this a "Round Trip". This basic "Wholesale/Retail" model is in
common use, where participants attempt to buy cheap inventory, mark it up and sell higher at a profit, and vice versa.

On the Third Chart, we show a process called the "London Sweep". Simply put, during the London Session, price sweeps
or reverses previous price action, which changes the status of the inventory. If the direction of the market continues
it creates a way for institutions to trap volume, and reverse at (or near) the open of the next session (usually the NY session).
So the bottom line for traders, is that when you see a "sweep" in the context of the London Market, be careful not be
on the side that gets "liquidated" if price reverses

We attach a second chart showing the New York Session in greater detail

Good luck
 

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And now we "Start all over again" with our list of high impact reports scheduled for
release to the public tomorrow prior to the open of the New York Session of the
S&P 500 Futures
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8:30am ET Initial Jobless Claims...............................Consensus is 225K
Philly Fed Manufacturing Index..........Consensus is 12.1
10:00am ET Jan Pending Home Sales.......................No Consensus Available

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Scenarios by Time Segments (That I trade)

9:30 to 10:30am ET

If Jobless Claims come in significantly higher than 225K, expect a knee-jerk bid in bonds and a "bad news is good news" rally in ES futures as the market prices in Fed dovishness. Conversely, a beat (lower claims) could trigger a sell-off as yields spike. The open will likely involve a "test" of the pre-market high or low established immediately after the 8:30 AM release.

11:00 to 12:30am ET

After the first hour (Initial Balance) is set, the market often seeks "value." With Pending Home Sales at 10:00 AM, any deviation from the trend could provide the momentum needed to break the IB high or low. Look for institutional "stacked imbalances" on the tape to confirm if the morning move has "legs" or if we revert to the daily VWAP (Volume Weighted Average Price).

12:30am to 1:30pm ET

As London traders wrap up their day, expect a brief surge in volume followed by a significant drop-off. If the morning trend was strong, we often see a "counter-trend profit-taking" move here. This is typically where "trapped" retail traders get chopped up in sideways action. Institutional desks often use this window to execute larger block orders with minimal slippage.

3pm to 4pm ET (Last Hour)

The final hour will be driven by the MOC imbalance and institutional position squaring ahead of the weekend. If the S&P 500 is trading near its session highs, expect a "gamma squeeze" or a late-day chase. Given the current 2026 bull market context (target 7,500), the bias remains "buy the dip" unless the 8:30 AM data fundamentally breaks the labor market resilience narrative.

Good Luck
 
From a trading desk perspective, the MOC imbalance from Wednesday tells us where the "smart money" finished their day, but the Overnight Low (6,866.25) is the more critical pivot for the open. If the market fails to hold the 6,870 level at the bell, expect a test of 6,824 as the momentum from Wednesday's buy imbalance has been neutralized by the overnight retreat.

We noticed that several student expressed in interest in trading prior to the open, saying they
believed the market would test lower. Unfortunately they took shorts, and were chopped up
a bit. One hopes the lesson (do not trade prior to the open on a day when economic news has
not been fully incorporated into the market) has been learned). We continue to monitor until we
see a "real" opportunity.

We attach a shot of our screen just prior to the open

Here we go (5 minutes to the open)
and

Good Luck
 

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