Gold halts sell off oil rises 6305 resistance 6255 support

Support 6258 6255 6245 6230 6208 6176
Resistance 6281 6284 6305 6313 6316 6359
Good morning. I hope you had a good long weekend. The FTSE 100 futures managed to hit the 6295 level yesterday which was the resistance level from Friday, and we have dropped back a bit since then. Gold hit 1200 (after a 6% drop from the 1300 level a little over a week ago) and has bounced a little bit since. Having dropped to 6250 from the 6295 the FTSE 100 has bounced a bit also and currently at 6270 as I write this. The bulls will be keen to break 6284 initially this morning for a push above 6300 this week. With the S&P popping above 2100 the omens are on the side of the bulls at the moment.

US & Asia Overnight from Bloomberg

  • Gold halts selloff; oil heads for 4th straight monthly gain
  • Aussie dollar surges as strong exports set to bolster GDP data

Asian stocks extended gains, trimming their worst month since February amid optimism the global economy is strong enough to withstand a boost to U.S. borrowing costs that may come as early as June. The dollar retreated versus major peers, paring its best rally since 2014.

Gains in Japan and Hong Kong pushed the regional equity benchmark up for a fifth straight day. China’s equities shrugged off a flash-crash in index futures with the Shanghai index heading for its biggest gain since March. Currencies from Australia to South Africa and Britain chipped away at the dollar. Gold climbed for the first time in 10 days, halting its longest slump in more than a year, as Treasuries dropped on their first day of trading this week. American crude oil headed for its longest run of monthly gains in five years amid output disruptions.

The Fed’s rate outlook continues to occupy markets as traders maintain odds of a hike in July at more than 50 percent. With U.S. officials emphasizing that any policy tightening is dependent on the economy continuing to improve, investors will be scrutinizing American payrolls and personal income data due this week. The potential for higher U.S. yields has revived the greenback in May, with a gauge of the currency versus major peers up more than 3 percent this month. Meanwhile, data is painting a lackluster picture of Japan’s economy, with bets leaders will have to boost stimulus weakening the yen.

“In either June or July, they’re going to” raise U.S. interest rates, said Kazuaki Oh’E, the head of fixed income at CIBC World Markets Japan Inc. in Tokyo. “The economy is not in a bad condition.”

Data on personal spending and income greet investors in the U.S. returning from Monday’s Memorial Day holiday, with the jobs report due on Friday. Markets in the U.K. also resume Tuesday after a break. Singapore and Indonesia will update on money supply, Thailand reports on trade and Hong Kong posts on retail sales. Later in the session, India will report on first-quarter gross domestic product.

“While keeping an eye on U.S. monetary policy, market participants will also be looking at which way the market could go next,” said Toshihiko Matsuno, chief strategist at SMBC Friend Securities Co. in Tokyo. “Investors want to see how U.S. markets react after their holiday.”

Stocks
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index climbed 0.6 percent as of 1:13 p.m. Tokyo time. The measure is still down 1.7 percent in May, its worst monthly drop since February. In January it tumbled 8 percent amid global anxiety over China.

Japan’s Topix index gained 0.8 percent after fluctuating at the start of the session, on track for a 2.7 percent advance in May, while energy and consumer companies led Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index down 0.2 percent, trimming its third straight monthly climb to 2.8 percent. The Kospi index in Seoul rose 0.6 percent.

The Shanghai Composite Index jumped 2.4 percent, set for the steepest climb since March 30. Contracts on the CSI 300 Index dropped as much as 10 percent at around 10:42 a.m. local time, recovering almost all of the losses in the same minute. The move had little effect on the underlying CSI 300, which rose 2.6 percent at the midday break.

In Hong Kong, the Hang Seng and Hang Seng China Enterprises indexes rose more than 1 percent. Singapore’s Straits Times Index advanced 1 percent.

Index operator MSCI Inc. will start including American Depository Receipts of Chinese shares in its stock gauges as of Tuesday’s close, giving passive investors bigger stakes in China’s technology and services companies, while downsizing state-run industrial and financial equities. MSCI will decide in June whether to include mainland-traded A shares as well.
Futures on the S&P 500 Index were up 0.2 percent from Friday’s close, to 2,102.25. Comments from Fed Chair Janet Yellen on Friday supporting the case for a rate increase in the next few months sent the U.S. benchmark up 0.4 percent.

Currencies
The yen weakened 0.2 percent to 111.29 per dollar, even as most major currencies rallied. Australia’s dollar climbed 0.8 percent. South Africa’s rand rose 0.5 percent and the pound strengthened 0.4 percent.

After rallying over the past two sessions the dollar took a breather, with the Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index, a gauge of the greenback against 10 major peers, down 0.1 percent. The index is still up 3.5 percent in May, after retreating over the previous three months.

Bets on the Fed increasing rates at next month’s meeting have jumped to 30 percent, from 12 percent a month ago, while odds of a move in July are at 54 percent, up from 26 percent, according to Fed funds futures tracked by Bloomberg. Fed officials including Chair Janet Yellen have flagged the possibility of a rate increase as soon as June over the past two weeks.

“U.S. policy normalization and its likely impact has remained a key theme for markets,” Mark Smith, a senior economist in Auckland at ANZ Bank New Zealand Ltd., said in a note to clients. “The dilemma facing the data-dependent Fed is that some U.S. data does not look as strong as it once did, with the manufacturing sector under the pump. At some stage the Fed will choose which course of action it will take, and trust that the economy – and financial markets – are resilient enough to bear it.”

Bonds
Treasuries declined, sending the yield on benchmark 10-year notes up by one basis point to 1.86 percent.

Australian government securities retreated, reversing initial gains, after the statistics bureau said net exports contributed 1.1 percentage points to gross domestic product, more than the 0.7 point increase forecast in a Bloomberg survey of economists. The yield on 10-year bonds rose two basis points to 2.30 percent in Sydney, after earlier declining two basis points.

Japanese two-year debt advanced after a sale of the securities drew the strongest demand since December 2014. The yield on the bonds declined 0.5 basis point to minus 0.245 percent. Yields on 10-year Japanese notes were unchanged at minus 0.115 percent.

Commodities
Gold for immediate delivery jumped 0.6 percent to $1,212.06 an ounce, after sliding almost 6 percent over the previous nine days as the prospect of a U.S. rate hike diminished the precious metal’s appeal.

Copper declined at least 0.4 percent with lead as the London Metals Exchange started trading for the week, while nickel surged 0.7 percent.

West Texas Intermediate crude was up 0.4 percent from Friday’s close in the U.S., to $49.53 a barrel, as traders await Thursday’s meeting of OPEC suppliers. WTI has climbed 7.8 percent in May, its fourth straight monthly advance and the longest stretch of gains since 2011.

Militant attacks have cut Nigerian oil supply to the lowest level in more than two decades while Canadian output is still stabilizing after sliding amid wildfires. Libya’s Petroleum Facilities Guard captured a town near the Es Sider and Ras Lanuf oil-loading terminals after fierce clashes with Islamic State militants. [Bloomberg]

FTSE 100 Outlook and Prediction

FTSE 100 Prediction
FTSE 100 Prediction

The bulls are still firmly in charge despite the drop form 6295 to 6250 on Monday on the futures prices. We have a pretty decent rising channel on the 30min chart, and if the bulls can break 6282 area initially then they should be good for a retest of the 6295, and more than likely the 6305 resistance area. This area looks fairly key for the bulls to break and we also have the top of the 20 day Bianca at 6313. Gold has bounced a bit, there is still uncertainty over when the US will actually raise rates again and we have Brexit coming up next month all for a few headwinds. However, buying the dip has been favourable for the past few sessions, and the daily chart is now bullish again, with support at 6230 and 6208. The 2 hour chart has resistance at 6305 though, hence the short around here, so the bulls will be keen to break this level today. I am thinking a dip and rise today with the 200ema on the 30min holding as support, at the 6255 level.

44 Comments

  1. Morning chaps…hope you all had a great bank holiday weekend…….OK down to work….good morning so far….trades as follows……Went short first at 87.6 out at 84.5 for + 3.1pts….long at 80.4 out at 86.9 for +6.5pts….short at 83.5 out at 81.7 for 1.8 pts long 82.8 it then dropped so added at 78.3 and 71.6…..out 83.9 for 1.1pt 84.5 for 6.2pts and 83.3 for + 11.7pts…..presently long Dax from 26.8 and 21.3 they are both losing at the moment…-25 and -20 ish….GL all.

          1. Out of longs at 70 for +10.1 and 70.5 on the other 3 for + 1.2…..+2 ….and +3.7pts …..still running Dax…

    1. Hi anstel
      thank you for your comments on thursday.
      I was not able to log on friday.
      your notes provided a lot to think about.
      your perseverance to overcome those losses
      are a lesson I will now follow. I am very easily
      willing to give up, and that’s my problem
      Your postings above on each of your trades are
      helpful to see how to trade, especially the drawdowns.
      If you are free and willing to post this type os commentary
      I would be grateful, as you are helping me to overcome some stupid
      trading behaviour I have.
      thank you once again, and good luck for today

      1. Thanks JSft…..you are not alone losing money…..I have had some catastrophic losses……been in some extremely bad situations but that’s how we learn……you can’t learn out of a book….and people can show you things but they can’t teach you how to trade…..we have to analyse our own mistakes and control our impulses to regain losses quickly….that’s a sure fire way to disaster…..take it slowly…..have a very high regard for RISK…..think what you could lose…..not what you could gain……good luck mate…..and don’t ever ever ever ever give up…..giving up is for losers…..

        1. I would just like to add……..there are some much better traders on here to teach you…..I make some bad decisions and you may be better to take what I do with a pinch of salt…..I’m not always consistant………..I’m trying but it’s early days…….if you copy anything I do its at your own risk…..I push it too much sometimes…..I don’t want you to think I’m any good at this mate……I just get lucky occasionally….

  2. Morning all
    I have 6288 as the 61.8 fib retrace of the move down from 21st April… Seems to be respecting that level well during cash hours – if a retrace then potential for a move back down towards 6054…
    Btw, I quit my job to trade full time Starting end of June (lovely quiet low volume market urgh).
    I needed to change jobs anyway, so have a 3-12 month window to see if it works out.
    GL today!

    1. Yeah good luck mate…..welcome to the rumbling stomach club we we get it wrong………:0)

    1. If you goin to play the game boy you gotta learn to play it right…….Hey I love it…..I bet those muppets were day traders lol….:0)

  3. compared to the last few weeks the ftse is now trading in a range of roughly 30 points, without the big spikes we had lately.
    Will this continue maybe and whats the main reason behind it?

    1. Not too sure……it’s indecision with the closed Dow around the 17900 area……..I think tomorrow and Thursday my guess is it will pull back a bit going into NFP.just hoping its got a bit of life in it today….even though I’m presently long I’m unsure TBH…..

        1. Good job tmfp is out on his hog……..I might not get a b@llocking for doing it wrong……mind you last time we thought it was safe to talk about the closed Dow….he chimed in …..I reckon he has got a head up display on his bike and he’s logged in to Keep an eye on us :0)…

          1. anstel
            did you close your earlier longs ?
            or are these the same ones you are talking about?

          2. No I closed the earlier ones …one at 70 and three at 70.5 …..I posted up there ^^^^^^^^ this lot is a new batch…..I added another at 61.5 I forgot to post….4 running in all for a second bite of the cherry hopefully…..

  4. Closed my second batch of Ftse longs and dumped one Dax…..sold 21.3 Dax at 23.6 for + 2.3….I wasn’t happy with that one…..four Ftse longs from 67.5……64.6……61.5……and 61 closed at 70.5 for +3pts at 70.5 for 5.9pts at 70.5 for +9pts and 70.9 for +9.9pts……just got one Dax in the red from earlier…..

  5. Two Ftse longs back on at 61.1 and 61.5….. Bloody hell gotta be quick…….out of both at 67 for + 6.9 and 6.5pts

  6. Right chaps I’m calling it a day……607.95 is the tally I think it’s about being light on your feet and reacting fast…instead of holding for days like I used too…..having some swing trades in the background is great and I like to do that but the quick in and outs put food on the table and pay the bills……..have a great rest of the day and good luck all……might have a look in later to see what’s going on…..bye for now….

  7. Evening chaps if anyone’s about a quick summary….I’m currently down approx 40pts on each of my 4 longs……should not have placed that last batch of longs but hey can’t win em all….good luck all…..

      1. Hi WSF…..yeah had it in my mind to maybe short it tomorrow for a dip down before NFP but I got it wrong…..anyway I’m holding it can’t see it collapsing this evening but bad trading to end the day…..I will go to my default setting with emotional regulation and watch and wait……

        1. When the Dow was in the 330’s a couple of weeks ago I was thinking the 200 sma was a likely touch,now we are back below the 50sma,but I havent got a clue really,pretty sure it will be higher than this in a couple of months though.

          1. I think it will be back up pretty quick personally…..it usually gets buyers into NFP….hope so or I will have to dump this little collection of mine for weekend….

          2. Yes they could run it up with the Chinese numbers tomorrow morning as an excuse.That resistance in the low 900’s has pushed it down 3 times now,be interesting if it breaks.I havent got the energy to do anything else tonight lol.

  8. Thanks for all the good wishes on my new trading business!

    Does anyone have experience with Intertrader Direct? Thinking of using them (currently using ig), but slightly concerned about depositing significant cash with them as they only have Gibraltar compensation scheme rather than FCA. There parent company BWin does give an indemnity though.

    1. Morning inoodle….have no experience with inter trader but interesting to hear about this Gibraltar compensation scheme…..going to have a look at that and see what I can learn…….good luck with your trading…….

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