Clinton takes first debate | FTSE 100 6881 6902 resistance | 6820 support

FTSE 100 Support 6853 6843 6837 6820 6779 6725
FTSE 100 Resistance 6881 6894 6896 6904 6945 6970

Good morning. That was quite a bit more of an aggressive sell off yesterday than I was expecting, with markets jittery ahead of the first US presidential debate. Unfortunately the 6865 area broke, and we ended up testing much lower supports on the daily chart – 6820 bottom of the 20 day Raff and the 25ema at 6804 (tested again overnight). While both candidates claimed victory after the debate, financial markets were judging it in favor of Clinton. U.S. stock index futures reversed losses after it was over, and haven assets including the yen and gold fell, suggesting investors saw lower risks ahead. Citigroup Inc. has said a Trump win in November could sink equities and warned this week it may also spur volatility in both gold and currency markets. Politics are going to be the overriding theme this week.

US & Asia Overnight from Bloomberg

Financial markets judged the first of three American presidential debates a win for Hillary Clinton, as Mexico’s peso rallied from a record low, U.S. stock index futures gained and gold retreated.

The peso, a proxy for Republican candidate Donald Trump’s election prospects, rebounded almost 2 percent and Canada’s dollar strengthened from its weakest level since March, a sign investors see a reduced chance he will win. Haven assets including the yen declined, with Japan’s currency losing ground versus all 16 major peers.

In a CNN/ORC poll of debate watchers, 62 percent said Clinton won the exchange. Wagers against the Mexican peso had surged to a record ahead of the televised matchup in New York after some opinion polls put the two candidates neck-and-neck following a pickup in support for Trump, who has pledged to renegotiate the two-decade-old North American Free Trade Agreement. Citigroup Inc. has said a Trump election victory could sink equities and spur volatility in gold and currency markets.

The debate “looks to have been taken as a Hillary win,” said Sean Callow, a senior currency strategist at Westpac Banking Corp. in Sydney. “The peso, Canadian dollar, S&P futures and Australian dollar are all surging — very much a relief rally in risk assets.”

The debate marked the first time that voters saw the major-party nominees on the same stage, a pivotal moment in a close and bitterly fought contest. The two candidates leveled sharp and personal charges and counter-charges over trade, the U.S. economy, race and foreign policy in an event that put on display their starkly different personalities and visions of the nation’s future.

Currencies

The Mexican peso jumped 1.8 percent, the most in two months, as of 12:53 p.m. Tokyo time. The currency of Canada, another beneficiary of the Nafta trade accord, rose 0.4 percent after having slipped to its weakest level since March ahead of the debate.
South Korea’s won rallied with higher-yielding currencies including the Australian and New Zealand dollars, while the yen slid 0.5 percent. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index fell 0.2 percent, reversing an earlier advance.

“Hillary looks the stronger of the two,” said Simon Pianfetti, a senior manager at the market solutions department at SMBC Trust Bank Ltd. in Tokyo. “This is bullish risk, and yen negative.”

Stocks

S&P 500 Index futures rallied 0.7 percent, having earlier fallen as much as 0.3 percent. The U.S. benchmark has risen by an average of 0.85 percent on the day following the first debate in the run-up to a general election, according to data going back to 1992 compiled by Strategas Research Partners LLC. Opinion polls have swung by 3 percent on average, within most surveys’ margin of error, following the first debates of election campaigns since 1984, Stategas noted.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index was up 0.3 percent, after earlier dropping as much as 0.9 percent. Energy shares led gains, while a global selloff in bank stocks continued amid concern about the financial health of Deutsche Bank AG, Germany’s largest lender. Financial markets in Taiwan were closed Tuesday owing to Typhoon Mehi.

Commodities

Crude oil slipped 0.1 percent to $45.89 a barrel in New York. It climbed 3.3 percent in the last session after tumbling 4 percent on Friday. OPEC members Nigeria and the United Arab Emirates backed reaching a deal to stabilize markets when the group meets Wednesday for talks in Algiers, while Venezuela’s oil minister warned prices could tumble below $20 if major producers fail to agree measures. Saudi Arabia has offered to cut production as part of a broader agreement, while signaling it doesn’t expect an accord this week. Copper fell 0.4 percent in London as nickel dropped 1.6 percent. Gold fell 0.2 percent after edging higher on each of the last six days. [Bloomberg]

FTSE 100 Outlook and Prediction

FTSE 100 Prediction
FTSE 100 Prediction

For today I am thinking dip and rise. The daily supports held yesterday generally speaking, with the 25ema at 6804 holding 2 tests (third test will probably break though), and the “relief” that Clinton did alright in the debate has spurred futures prices back up. There is support on the 30min chart from the pivot at 6843, and also the 25ema at that level as well, so I feel that this area is worth a long for a rise up towards R1 at 6882 and then 6902 where we have the 2hour coral line (red) as resistance. This level looks fairly key and the bulls will be keen to break through this to push higher towards 7000 – whether they can make it that high remains to be seen. As a big picture I still think we are going to get a big leg down – the question is if we are now in it and 6950 is the high for the time being, or if we push a bit higher first – maybe to just above 7000 then drop back. Maybe 7050 something like that.

So, for today, I am thinking that the bulls will have the momentum and that the 6845 area should hold. If not then back down to 6805 and possibly lower. So cut the long and flip to short.

18 Comments

  1. Morning all.

    Had a result with my Dow long, closed for +90pts, and had FTSE long that closed overnight for +40pts. Earning money whilst sleeping is the way forward.

    Still have mostly shorts but will add if it rises or stage close if it falls.

    GL

    1. Well done, nice overnight rise there after the debate

      Gap has closed now with yesterday so be interesting to see if the 6820 area holds…

    2. Well done, nice overnight rise there after the debate

      Gap has closed now with yesterday so be interesting to see if the 6820 area holds…

      1. No, I think it will so long as the oil isn’t shocking. I am mainly short but would like to close out my little longs.

  2. Well,
    that was my most painful day ever. multiple 10s of k down drain.
    *sulk*.
    I’m now having to question my strategy, or at least my money management.
    I think I can categorise that as a Si sized event 🙂

    1. Sorry to hear that inoodle, can I ask what your strategy was, we may all learn something.

      It’s cool if you don’t want too share or can’t be bothered to explain.

      1. Hey Morko,
        well essentially i disregard all the rules about not adding to a losing position and i scale into a position as it moves against me. I end up with 3 x 10pp trades in a position, then as each of these move into profit, I take them off one at a time meaning that I’m usually in profit by the time it gets back to my first entry. I will let one or more of these clips run depending on price action.
        This works very nicely in choppy markets… however if i get on the wrong side of a strong directional move, I often choose to aggressively average as it moves against me – as in clips of something like 30pp, 60pp, 120pp. This occasionally gets me to 1000pp on the whole position. In fact this is too big for my account and I’ve looked into the abyss on several occasions and realised how easy it is to burn 100k.
        Todays move was less than 150pts against me, which is really too far for me to try to defend as I was the wrong way at the start of the move. Not knowing the reason for the move, I didn’t eject fast enough and tried to defend it with multiple entries too close together and at too large a size for each clip.
        I should have ejected after 50pts as it moved past a strong level.
        Its all about getting a good entry level and knowing when to eject and when to defend… I’ll let you know if I figure it out! 🙂

    2. The markets have been weird the past few sessions. I’m getting signals but they all seem to be failing this week. So I don’t think it’s just you. Had 3 index trades today fail. The only winner was a short on gold at 1337.

      With the FTSE it’s almost a case of doing the opposite to what you think!

    3. 10s of K??? in a 100 points range?
      Today would have been easy to me if I had an internet connection. Why they cut me out up to 3pm I have no idea. That short at 8am on DAX was just screeming. I wouldn’t take the long though later.
      100 points there easily, would have been.

      1. I was on the Dax, so it moved a bit more than that ! DB and VW both in index… only wish I’d heard the news – my dodgy internet made my squawk intermittent.

  3. Debating a Dow short towards the end of session if it keeps creeping up…looking for a price over 18250.

    It seems sluggish to rise and what with the oil and politics I think there’s a good chance of it falling overnight and tomorrow?

    Will post if I do.

  4. Right, abit rash but I’m Dow short at 18225

    Seems like it’s struggling to push higher, 50pt prof lim set.

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