FTSE 100 resistance 7020 7061 | support 6972 | Apple drops | Asia drops

FTSE 100 Support 6972 6968 6965 6950 6928 6927
FTSE 100 Resistance 7017 7020 7050 7061

Good morning. Interesting movement on the FTSE yesterday with the initial drop from the 7025 area as expected, then a sharp rally to 7068 and then fall back again and now sub 7000. Looks like it might have just been the market playing games to stop out a few early shorts before a big leg down…. especially as that price movement wasn’t replicated on the Dax and SP. The overnight weakness is off the back of disappointing Apple results, with the first annual sales decline since 2001. Is that steam train coming to a halt? Crude oil dropped and sterling is back below 122 – neither of which will help the FTSE bulls target 7130 again.

US & Asia Overnight from Bloomberg

Asian shares dropped with U.S. equity index futures as oil prices slumped and Apple Inc.’s results disappointed. Australia’s dollar strengthened after inflation data.

Energy companies led declines on the MSCI Asia Pacific Index, which retreated from a two-week high. Apple, the world’s largest company, fell as much as 3.1 percent in after-hours U.S. trading following its first annual sales decline since 2001. Crude oil sank to a three-week low after Russia said it wouldn’t join output cuts planned by OPEC, while aluminum surged in China. The Aussie rose by the most in a week and Australia’s two-year bonds fell as a pickup in consumer-price gains curbed speculation another interest-rate cut is coming.

“Plenty of countries want an exemption to the OPEC output cuts and that’s putting pressure on oil,” said James Audiss, Sydney-based senior wealth manager at Shaw and Partners Ltd., which oversees about $7.5 billion. “Apple’s forward expectations aren’t great and it’s susceptible to more of a pullback.”

Sliding prices for Apple iPhones and a forecast for lower-than-expected profitability over the holiday period cast a cloud over an earnings season that’s been generally positive, with about three-quarters of the S&P 500 Index companies to have reported so far beating estimates. Skepticism about major oil producers’ ability to agree output reductions continues to hang over financial markets, which nonetheless have become more settled as traders grow more confident about the outcomes of the U.S. presidential election and this year’s Federal Reserve policy meetings.

Bank of America Merrill Lynch’s GFSI Market Risk Index — a measure of future price swings implied by options trading on global equities, interest rates, currencies and commodities — has fallen to the lowest since 2014. Hillary Clinton’s odds of victory in next month’s vote are close to the highest on record at 86.5 percent, according to forecaster FiveThirtyEight, and futures trading indicates a 73 percent chance of a U.S. interest-rate rise by December.

Stocks

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index was down 0.3 percent as of 1:45 p.m. Tokyo time. Benchmark share gauges in Australia and South Korea slid by the most in six weeks, while the Shanghai Composite Index retreated from a nine-month high. Japan’s Topix index fluctuated after posting its best close since May on Tuesday.

Wesfarmers Ltd., Australia’s largest retail chain, tumbled by the most since 2009 in Sydney after sales at its Coles supermarkets missed estimates. Great Wall Motor Co. plunged 11 percent in Hong Kong after China’s biggest maker of SUVs was downgraded by JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Nomura Holdings Inc. in the wake of earnings.

Bank of China Ltd., Nintendo Co. and Posco are among Asian companies reporting results Wednesday. Outside of the region, the lineup includes Tesla Motors Inc., Coca-Cola Co., Bayer AG and GlaxoSmithKline Plc.

S&P 500 futures fell 0.2 percent, after the underlying gauge declined on Tuesday by the most in two weeks as data showed consumer confidence receded in the world’s biggest economy.

Commodities

Crude oil slid 1.3 percent to $49.31 a barrel in New York. Output cuts are not an option for Russia, the nation’s envoy to the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries said, according to Interfax. American supplies rose by 4.75 million barrels last week, industry data showed ahead of Wednesday’s release of official figures.

Aluminum in Shanghai jumped as much as 5.2 percent to its highest level since 2014, extending a rebound on speculation that transport bottlenecks may have created a shortage for some users in China. The metal rose 0.2 percent in London.

“There is a shortage of metal in the system right now,” Paul Adkins, managing director of consultancy AZ China Ltd., said by phone Nanning in southern China. “The cost of road freight has gone up and this has created a rail bottleneck in the aluminum provinces in the north ofChina. There appears to be a lot of metal stuck in warehouses.”

Gold rose for a second day amid speculation demand will strengthen in the run-up to this weekend’s Diwali festival in India, the world’s largest bullion-consuming country after China. It’s still down for the month and Oversea-Chinese Banking Corp., the most-accurate forecaster for the precious metal in the latest rankings compiled by Bloomberg, predicts the price will drop by about 14 percent to $1,100 an ounce by the end of next year as Fed rate increases boost the dollar.

Currencies

The Aussie strengthened 0.5 percent versus the greenback, the best performance among major currencies. Consumer prices in Australia increased 1.3 percent from a year earlier in the last quarter, exceeding the previous period’s 1 percent gain and the 1.1 percent rise forecast in a Bloomberg survey.

“A jump in headline inflation will help calm RBA fears over inflation expectations and thus means a steady hand on rates into year end,” said Sean Callow, a senior strategist at Westpac Banking Corp. in Sydney.

The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed, after retreating 0.1 percent from a seven-month high on Tuesday.

Bonds

Australia’s two-year bond yield increased by three percentage points to a one-week high of 1.70 percent. The probability that the central bank will cut interest rates by mid-2017 dropped to 29 percent in the swaps market, from 37 percent on Tuesday.

The yield on U.S. Treasuries due in a decade declined by one basis point to 1.75 percent, trimming October’s increase to 15 basis points. American sovereign debt is saddling investors with losses for the third month in a row as speculation mounts that inflation will quicken and the Fed will boost interest rates.

“The cyclical low for inflation rates has almost certainty past,” said Peter Jolly, the global head of markets research at National Australia Bank Ltd. in Sydney, who predicts headline consumer-price gains in the U.S. will rise above 3 percent early next year if oil prices remain at current levels. “That will help change market perceptions of inflation ahead, and put to rest deflation fears for now.” [Bloomberg]

FTSE 100 Outlook and Prediction

FTSE 100 Prediction
FTSE 100 Prediction

For today I am keeping my bearish vibe as the bulls really needed to close above 7055 yesterday to enable the basis for a push higher. We have a few resistance levels at the 7020 area so I think this is a good level to start with, if we get an initial rally. The bears will be keen to break below 6965 which is the bottom of the 10 day Bianca channel as that opens the possibility for a trip down to 6930 or lower. I don’t think it will be bearish enough today to dip to that level though.

If the bulls manage to break through 7020 then we could well be on for a test of yesterdays high level at 7070, a break of which keeps that 7130 and higher hope alive. Again, I don’t think we will see that extreme of price today.

We do have a few supports on the daily chart at the 6970 area in terms of the 25ema and the daily coral, so a break of this level would certainly start to make things look more bearish.

39 Comments

  1. morning all.
    Thinking of a dax long @ 10668.. may have just missed the entry though which was a couple of points above.
    Pretty bearish feel so far and confusing as usual regarding weak dollar being bad for indices (suppose it means strong pound, but still seems odd).

  2. Hi all.
    Congrats to those patient shorts who survived yesterday’s shennanigans.
    The question must be, will 6930/40 survive the third test?
    Much as everyone’s salivating about Armageddon, it ain’t broke till it’s broke and we’re still in the fortnight long range.

  3. Closed out of all of my shorts today. That can only mean one thing! (Cue the crash). I’ve gone long gold for my 3rd attempt at a christmas bonus…

  4. FTSE bounced off 6940 again…US market seems to be strugging off Apple as it’s down 4% from close ..Dow down 0.5%

  5. Nice noon rally to sell into, managed to hit 60 quite hard, keeping for everandever 🙂
    Apart from a bit of +11 blue in the bank 🙂

      1. 30 will do for 60% covered.
        No idea what’s going to happen with the DOW or how much it will affect us, but there will be a bounce coming at some point between now and the close, from where to where is another matter 🙂

    1. Buy your own mine Si, be cheaper 🙂
      Put a couple of quid into Bitcoin for a laugh, good bull move under way, still another+10% in it before the end of the year I reckon.

      1. Ha! I hate bitcoin.

        What I’m trying to work out is – if stocks go down sharp, does gold go down with them, or does it fly up. Hmmm.

        1. Money’s got to go somewhere I guess. If not equities or bonds then where?
          Traditional hedge has always been precious metals. Trouble is, everyone knows that.
          There’s nothing to hate about bitcoin, it’s just another market. And it’s going up.

  6. Afternoon chaps. Anyone like to make a forecast on what might happen when la la land, sorry America, opens?…

  7. Hello chaps, loving this bear action. Closed about 30% of shorts.

    I have added a few FTSE longs but think we are heading sub 6900 in the short term?

    However oil is causing me pain! Debating on to hold or fold? 3:30 should be interesting. It’s always those punt trades that go wrong – why can’t I learn ? 🙁 !

  8. I’m feeling very tense today while trading! I think it was holding that dax long earlier! 🙂 It did work out in the end, but I’m not used to this waiting malarkey – more used to shorts which happen quickly.

      1. Perhaps I should go for something more sedate! -like the oil I just faded. fastest profit loss ever. My third top picking attempt did work and I held the pullback till 38.2 fib, but still out of pocket…:) oopsie

        1. omg, it looks like oil is going for the 50% retrace… or perhaps the gap fill beyond that! I don’t have the balls 🙂

        1. I don’t even know if there’s a divi. I shorted 56 took it out for nothing.
          First decent day for a week and that’s only because I went back to big stakes despite saying I wouldn’t.

          1. Looks like a 4 pointer. Wasn’t looking and got whipped out at 63, net short at 58 plus 4 for div so net net at 54. Think I might run it this evening as it saves having to watch that baking rubbish on the telly.

          2. Looks like I’ll have to watch the telly, just closed it all at 30. So back to where I was yesterday morning, lovely!!

  9. Afternoon all, been trading on my phone today, nowhere near a computer! Struggle to see it at my age! Had a couple of little “bottom picks” at 50-55 this morning and nicked a couple of points back from yesterday’s Horlicks, however still licking my wounds from not having grown a great big stainless steel pair!!
    In my self promised “exile” I am struggling not to start really pressing the sell button!!

  10. Pulled my FTSE longs just after close. Made about 30 points which more than covered divi on the shorts.

    Pulled one oil long for 60pts, shorted the bouncy for 25 and now have one long position left.

    In in heavy on the Dow short, too heavy really but I got carried away.

    I’m short on gbpusd @ 12228

    Short on Dax @ 10675

    Multiple shorts on FTSE and Dow.

    GL

  11. I just added to my gold long @1266
    Bitcoin is flying, can sometimes give confidence that gold will rise.

    I’m convinced it will 1300 by end of year

  12. …gold, I don’t know too much about Bitcoin but word is its going up to about 80000….will stay away from it, got account killer all over it.

  13. tmfp, I see our black swan war is ramping up….
    Around 800 soldiers along with tanks, armoured vehicles and drones will now head to Estonia in the spring in a Nato effort to reassure the Baltic states over Russian aggression.

  14. lovely ramp on the ftse pre gdp figure. Interesting when figure comes out – if its good, then cable will rocket and thus ftse will feel negative effect of that, while counteracting positive news should push up ftse.. Rise looks like BS to me, hence I reckon its retracing to 50% or more (wish I’d had the balls to hold my 7000 short at size – got rid after 5pts move down)

    1. Damn, I’ve been right twice without the balls to take the trades (or hold them at least).
      I’m trading my P&L a bit too much – I’d made target and didn’t want to risk giving it back…

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