Asia falls | Westminster Chaos | FTSE 100 6180 resistance 5903 support

FTSE 100 Support 5899 5884 5760 5715 5709 5537 5403
FTSE 100 Resistance 6036 6125 6140 6190 6258

Good morning. Well I expect the fallout from the Leave vote winning the referendum is going to last a while now for the FTSE 1oo and the markets in general, and already Westminster has defended into a slightly chaotic mess with firings, resignations and arguments galore. A lot of talk around invoking Article 50, and what a poisoned chalice the next leader of the Conservatives will have – whether thats Boris or someone else. Labour in disarray also with resignations of several shadow ministers. Anyway, we are where are so lets trade around it, the volatility certainly helps once you get the move right!

US & Asia Overnight from Bloomberg

  • More than $2.5 trillion wiped from global equities on Friday
  • U.K. politics in disarray as investors sketch path ahead

Asian stocks outside Japan fell as Britain’s vote to leave the European Union continued to roil global financial markets. Japanese stocks rose as the yen steadied following its biggest surge since 1998.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index excluding Japan dropped 0.9 percent, extending declines after global shares tumbled on Friday. Japan’s Topix added 1.1 percent, rebounding from its worst loss since the aftermath of the March 2011 earthquake. The British pound plummeted to a 31-year low as investors grapple with unanswered questions on the details of Britain’s exit from the EU. Investors are watching for policy action by central banks globally to ease the market turmoil and pump liquidity into financial markets.“There’s some expectation for policy cooperation,” said Shoji Hirakawa, chief global strategist at Tokai Tokyo Research Center in the city. “But until we actually see this materializing, it’s difficult for the market to gain strength.”

Brexit wiped more than $2.5 trillion from global equity values on Friday. Prime Minister David Cameron resigned without spelling out when the U.K. intends to leave the EU and eight members of Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn’s team quit amid calls for his ouster. U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry travels to Brussels and then London on Monday as Nicola Sturgeon, the first minister of Scotland, which voted to remain in the EU, said there’s a possibility of a second referendum on independence from the U.K.

Japan Prime Minister Shinzo Abe issued instructions for various measures to stabilize markets, Finance Minister Taro Aso told reporters in Tokyo after a meeting Monday. Abe ordered the Bank of Japan to provide funds to support the financial system, and gave instructions to ensure liquidity, BOJ Deputy Governor Hiroshi Nakaso said.

More Referendums

“Investors are looking for further developments in the Brexit aftermath,” said Bernard Aw, a strategist at IG Asia Pte in Singapore. “My main worry is related to Brexit, especially on the possibility of more referendums from EU countries. Should such a scenario gain traction, we can expect more risk aversion in global markets.”

Japan’s Topix index rose Monday as the yen traded at 101.71 a dollar. The yen was closing in on 99 at one point on Friday as investors rushed for the relative safety of Japanese government bonds. Some strategists and investors say the rally in the currency isn’t over, with HSBC Holdings Plc and GCI Asset Management Corp. mooting a rise to 95 against the greenback.
Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index added 0.2 percent, the only other major market along with Japan to post gains on Monday. Still, losses at companies with earnings generated in the U.K. continued Friday’s declines. Henderson Group Plc slumped 11 percent and BT Investment Management Ltd. sank 6.9 percent.

South Korea’s Kospi index and Taiwan’s Taiex Index each fell 0.4 percent. Singapore’s Straits Times Index declined 0.5 percent and New Zealand’s S&P/NZX 50 Index lost 0.3 percent.

The Hang Seng Index retreated 1.2 percent. Hong Kong’s benchmark slumped 2.9 percent on Friday, its biggest drop since Feb. 11, as HSBC Holdings Plc and Standard Chartered Plc tumbled.

The Shanghai Composite Index increased 0.2 percent. The Chinese central bank weakened the daily fixing of the yuan reference rate by the most since August on Monday.

Futures on the S&P 500 Index dropped 0.7 percent. The U.S. equity benchmark index declined 3.6 percent on Friday, the most since August 2015. [Bloomberg]

FTSE 100 Outlook and Prediction

FTSE 100 Prediction
FTSE 100 Prediction

Still all up in the air really and is certainly going to be an interesting few weeks ahead. Is this the start of a few others leaving the EU – Sweden etc – maybe it is, maybe it isn’t but we are certainly going to get a changing landscape over the next decade. Anyway, for today we have the pivot at 6036 for initial resistance if the bulls continue this bounce form 5880 that we have had overnight. Above that we could be on for a test of the 100 Hull MA on the 2 hour at 6190 which looks a good spot for a short, as we also have the live charts pivot here at 6188. The 30min chart is still bearish to start with, showing resistance at 5995, so if that stays intact initially then a drop down to test 5900 looks likely – we have a major PRT support line here.

38 Comments

  1. Morning Nick !! @ Tmfp Indeed it is!! Long @5900 bounced well !! shorted around 6110 out at 6090 let someone else have the rest … good day all

  2. Looks like a gentle decay setting in after the early pump. Will be interesting to see when/if it accelerates and where support will be found.
    Short term charts have a bit of elasticity lol, but 5900 looks a likely hold as we stand.
    Trying to get a handle on how the relationship between the three indexes will progress, my FTSE/DOW swap well under water at the mo.

    1. There appears to be very little buying about, should be able to gauge it by the strength of the oversold bounce that is being attempted now off the 60 level on FTSE and DAX. I would think it would be nominal.
      The unquantifiable as ever is where and when the PPSquad crank up the mower.

      1. Morning all, chopped my FTSE dow swap for -150 points and Dow long for -100 points on Friday night, ooops, slightly spoilt what was otherwise a good day!
        I think I will sit it out for a bit. That said if there is limited help and it gets towards the 5700 area I’ll be looking to pick some up. Am watching the £/€ quite closely as I think Brexit may eventually cause more damage to € than £. Not ready to put my money where my mouth is yet.

        1. Yeah, a bit premature on the diff trade unfortunately. Just added a small av down at 11180, that’s going in another box lol.

          1. I’ve got a spare box here doing nothing totally empty if you need more storage space :0)

  3. Just watching the arse fall out of STG.
    Difficult to judge how buying inspired by the consequent cheapness of STG denominated FTSE multinationals will counterbalance the weakness of more domestic components, and what the nett FTSE result will be..
    DAX looking awful, but not too awful to buy yet imo.

  4. Morning all.
    House builders and banks getting killed.
    Any thoughts on when panic sets in ?.. RBS 15%off.
    I made the mistake of trying to knife catch banks back in 08 crisis…

    1. Oh I see rbs and barc both halted on exchange 17 mins ago (via zerohedge on Twitter )

  5. Took +2 on the short, 50:1 risk reward the wrong way round 🙂
    Going back to bed, see you later.

  6. the margins on IG are just killing me at the moment so no trading for me
    as i am still in a steep learning curve…. grrrrrrrrrr:(

    1. Anton Kreil reckons US UK and Singapore banks safest. Tweeted a list of institutions to be wary of the other day. Will try to get a link up for you.

  7. So , one power nap later feeling slightly more human, I see the fog of reality continues to thicken, 120 euro, 1315 dollar but FTSE still 500 points too high.
    Anybody doing anything here?

    1. Hey mate
      I’m short s&p 2009, mainly due to getting sucked in on a trade signal from auto chartist!
      Seems to be going up though

      1. Afternoon tmfp, Just bought some FTSE at 6000, looking for 6020 and then short around 14:00 and long around 14:20
        GL

          1. long is not working out for +6 for now.
            I can smell a BS rally at DOW open, but will wait until 14:20-14:25

      2. Autochartist lol, the tea leaves of technical analysis 🙂
        2009, that was the low wasn’t it? Unlucky.

  8. Well I was hoping FTSE will do the other way around but managed to nick some pts from 05-20 range, now a short around 6010 would be good for R/R.
    Shorted 6000, will add more at 6010 and S6030

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