Interest rate cuts brewing | FTSE 100 6700 resistance | 6650 support

FTSE 100 Support 6677 6668 6644 6639 6558
FTSE 100 Resistance 6692 6695 6700 6721 6724 6745 6813

Good morning. A fairly flat day on the FTSE with the bulls failure to break 6710 looking like they might be running out of steam now we have had the “1000 pointer” with the rise from 5727 to 6727 (and a little bit). Oil has dropped below $45 which will have a bit of an effect on the oil companies in the FTSE, as well as the pound holding above $1.32 might well see the start of the FTSE 100 pullback.

US & Asia Overnight from Bloomberg

  • S&P 500 futures slip as crude oil drops to about $45 a barrel
  • Yen advances with U.S. Treasuries as ringgit weakens

The Australian and New Zealand dollars dropped by the most this month as speculation mounted that their central banks will cut interest rates as soon as next month. Asian stocks outside of Japan retreated with oil as haven assets including the yen and U.S. Treasuries rose.

The Aussie retreated from near a two-month high reached Friday as the Reserve Bank of Australia said the jobs market was losing momentum amid weak inflation. The kiwi lost ground against all 31 major peers after Reserve Bank of New Zealand moved to rein in the nation’s housing boom, an obstacle to lowering borrowing costs. The MSCI Asia Pacific excluding Japan Index snapped a six-day winning streak as crude slipped to about $45 a barrel. Shares in Tokyo advanced as trading resumed after a holiday, while the yield on 10-year U.S. government debt fell from this month’s high.

Policy makers are under pressure to unleash stimulus as the global economic outlook shows signs of worsening. The International Monetary Fund is due to update its projections for world growth on Tuesday and Managing Director Christine Lagarde warned last week that estimates may be cut. Nonetheless, global equities have recovered to above where they were at the time of the U.K.’s vote to leave the European Union and the U.S. earnings season has so far delivered more positive surprises than negative ones.

“The market is taking a pause,” said Tony Farnham, a strategist at Paterson Securities in Sydney. “There isn’t much of a catalyst out there. People are starting to question if there’s still value in the market following the post-Brexit rally.”

U.S. data on Tuesday are forecast to show housing starts were little changed in June from the previous month, while companies due to report quarterly results include Goldman Sachs Group Inc., Microsoft Corp. and Johnson & Johnson. Turkey’s central bank is seen lowering its overnight lending rate by a quarter of a percentage point at its first policy review since a failed coup over the weekend. Economists were predicting a half-point reduction prior to the attempted takeover by some of the military, a Bloomberg survey showed.

Currencies

The Aussie slipped 0.9 percent to 75.25 U.S. cents as of 1:48 p.m. Tokyo time, after strengthening in each of the last seven weeks. Minutes published Tuesday from the RBA’s July 5 policy meeting showed that the central bank estimated the economy to have slowed last quarter and policy makers were concerned about currency appreciation. The likelihood of an August rate cut has increased to 56 percent from 45 percent over the past week, derivatives indicate.

New Zealand’s dollar dropped 1.1 percent. The central bank said it will require property investors buying housing in the nation to have a deposit of at least 40 percent from Sept. 1, compared with an existing requirement that such buyers in Auckland have at least a 30 percent deposit. Swaps traders are pricing in a 78 percent chance of an RBNZ rate cut on Aug. 11, compared with 39 percent a week ago.

The yen strengthened 0.4 percent to 105.78 versus the greenback, after sliding 1.2 percent in the last session. It was trading at about 106 prior before the outcome of the Brexit vote. The currency tumbled 4.1 percent last week as Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe outlined plans for a “bold”stimulus package in the wake of an election victory.
South Africa’s rand and Malaysia’s ringgit led losses among emerging-market currencies, weakening by 0.3 percent. China’s yuan was the best performer with a 0.1 percent gain.

Stocks

The MSCI Asia Pacific excluding Japan Index fell 0.5 percent as benchmarks declined in Hong Kong, Shanghai and South Korea. Japan’s Topix index rose 0.6 percent from Friday’s close, buoyed by Monday’s slide in the yen. SoftBank Group Corp. tumbled 10 percent, its biggest loss since 2012, after agreeing to pay $32 billion for ARM Holdings Plc.

Futures on the S&P 500 Index declined 0.1 percent, after the gauge closed at a record high. Contracts on the U.K.’s FTSE 100 Index fell 0.4 percent.

“On current sentiment it seems likely that any pullbacks will be shallow and a buying opportunity,” said Chris Weston, chief market strategist at IG Ltd. in Melbourne. “We will need to see good earnings, or the market is at risk of rolling over.”

Commodities

Crude oil retreated 0.4 percent to $45.05 a barrel in New York. It slid 1.6 percent on Monday after a failed coup attempt in Turkey failed to disrupt shipments through the country, a vital conduit for moving from Russia and Iraq to the Mediterranean Sea.

Gold held near a two-week low, while copper declined 0.3 percent in London.

Bonds

U.S. Treasuries due in a decade rose for the first time in four days, pushing their yield down by three basis points to 1.55 percent. The yield reached 1.60 percent in the last session, the highest it’s been since June 24, when the Brexit vote count was announced. Morgan Stanley predicts the rate will sink to 1 percent in the first quarter of 2017, lower than any of the 61 estimates in a Bloomberg survey. Similar-maturity bonds in Australia also advanced, cutting their yield by six basis points to 1.94 percent. New Zealand’s yield fell seven basis points to 2.28 percent.

The cost of protecting Asian bonds against default using credit-default swaps dropped to an 11-month low, according to Markit iTraxx Asia index prices compiled by Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. and data provider CMA. [Bloomberg]

FTSE 100 Outlook and Prediction

FTSE 100 Prediction
FTSE 100 Prediction

We have a few resistance areas around the 6700 area with the 30min coral looking like a decent entry signal, short around the 6695 area to start with. We have the bottom of the 10 day Bianca channel at 6644 so i think we might well see that this morning and possible bounce a little bit there. If the bears break that though then the worm has definitely turned and we are on for a drop down to 6550 and possibly lower. Worth shorting a break of that. On the bullish side, if the bulls break 6700 then we will most likely test 6725 and probably 6745. However, I think we could do with a bit of a pullback before more significant upside, as the daily RSI(10) is still at 67 (but has dropped off a bit).

33 Comments

  1. Morning all.
    Awesome prediction this morning Nick!
    Are you doing any courses in London in the near future?

  2. wonder if its gonna break 6660… dax looking fairly weak, but both seem to be sitting at support.
    There is a rising channel on the ftse 30min which is providing support for the last 2 hours.. The channel goes back to the low on 6th July.. Causing a bit of a triangle at present with downward pressure – i guess it will pop out with a little break either way (hopefully down since I’m short as ever)

  3. Has to drop doesn’t it as I closed my short before weekend haha

    Let’s see where it goes when the US opens…

    1. Hey Anstel, you had good run mate, I went short at 6665 then close it at 6661. went back short at 6685 then stopped out. we long at 6700 then I close it at 6708.
      Whats next 🙂

        1. Must be awful trading from the poolside…..the sun makes it really hard to see the screen…..:0)…..I could probably put up with it if I really had too..”…

    1. I probably have done that part of the learning curve already……now it’s making its way back into my account balance….sorry about that…:0)

      1. I was thinking more along the lines of you would be making more hence giving more and receiving less due to my poor strategys haha

        1. Believe me I’ve had some big losses…..but eventually the penny drops……..from what I have researched it takes between 3 and 5 years to find consistency ….and depending on how much the learning curve has cost you….that’s going to determine how long it takes to actually move into overall profit…….If you start any business you have set up costs…..stock,training,,,staff,,repairs and renewals to equipment.advertising, business rates…the list goes on so to think we can come into trading and make money consistently from the get go is unrealistic…..JSft last week was upset that he was down a considerable amount,but money represents experience paid for…Provided we eventually learn from our mistakes and learn to control our mindset….that experience will pay dividends further down the road….If we give up and get despondent then it’s just a waste of time and money….good luck rich on your trading path…:0)

  4. Out of the lot around 90 -92….that’s me done….Target reached for the day…time to play :0) good luck all……

  5. I’m also going to try to call it a day – another day of profit in an amount that I can live on if I can avoid the occasional yuuuge drawdown 🙂
    I think we probably all deserve a bit of sun today, so I’m going to grab it while its hot 🙂
    See you tomorrow!

    1. Great stuff inoodle well done mate…see you tomorrow……goin to splash on the sun cream now……good luck all…….

      1. Thanks Anstels, well least there be no div hunters today, even though the ft still looking very bullish

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