Bull in charge Asia rises 6323 and 6336 resistance 6265 support

Support 6261 6242 6220 6219 6163 6157
Resistance 6305 6313 6324 6336 6354 6383
TSO
Good morning. Well, we got the initial rise on the FTSE yesterday as the bulls managed to continue their rally from Friday, and they kept the momentum going to break the 6270 resistance and even manage to hit 6300 before the bears appeared. Not overly strong from the bears though yesterday so probably decided to bide their time. The S&P just missed the 2096 long order before rallying to 2113 so between them they didn’t give the best day yesterday for me. Trading life eh! Charts still look bullish for the moment, however the 10 day Raff channels have switched to a downward trend, and the Bianca channel tops have moved up to 6324/6336 now so thats the next area of resistance to watch. 6220 for support today

US & Asia Overnight from Bloomberg

  • Oil slips from 10-month high as gold, industrial metals fall
  • Mining shares rally after commodities entered a bull market

Asian stocks rose for a third day and South Korea’s won strengthened after comments by Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen quelled speculation U.S. interest rates will be raised in July. Oil retreated from a 10-month high as zinc dropped for the first time in nine days.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index was headed for its strongest close since April, led by gains in energy companies and raw-materials producers. Futures on the S&P 500 were little changed, after the benchmark rose to its highest since November. The Bloomberg Commodity Index declined, after entering a bull market in the last session. Gold fell from a two-week high, dropping in tandem with industrial metals. The won jumped by the most since March as trading resumed following a holiday in Seoul, while the Japanese yen weakened.

Yellen said Monday she expects to raise interest rates only gradually and held off from specifying any timeframe, a shift from her May 27 stance that a move was probable “in the coming months.” The odds of a rate hike by July dropped to 22 percent in the futures market, after halving to 27 percent on Friday as a report showed U.S. jobs growth in May was the weakest in almost six years. While the prospect of borrowing costs staying lower for longer is giving a lift to stocks and emerging-market currencies, gains may prove short-lived should the global economy remain subdued.

“It seems likely that we will get at most one rate hike this year and that’s positive for equities and commodities,” said Ric Spooner, chief analyst at CMC Markets in Sydney. “Of the beaten-down commodities, the oil market is the best place. We’re already seeing supply cutbacks.”

Central banks in Australia and India are due to announce monetary policy decisions Tuesday, while Taiwan will release trade data. China is scheduled to announce last month’s change in its foreign-exchange reserves, Germany has April industrial output figures coming and a report on U.K. house prices is also expected. The World Bank will issue an update on the global economic outlook, having in January forecast a 2.9 percent expansion for this year.

Stocks
The MSCI Asia Pacific Index rose 0.6 percent as of 12:55 p.m. Tokyo time. Benchmark stock gauges advanced 0.8 percent or more in Hong Kong, South Korea and Taiwan, while Japan’s Topix gained 0.6 percent and the Shanghai Composite Index fell 0.2 percent.

Posco, South Korea’s largest steelmaker, jumped more than 6 percent in Seoul and BHP Billiton Ltd. climbed to a one-month high in Sydney. Inpex Corp., Japan’s biggest energy explorer, rallied 4.5 percent and PetroChina Co. gained 2 percent.

Commodities
The Bloomberg Commodity Index declined for the first time in a week, having ended Monday more than 20 percent higher than its January low. A four-year bear market that pushed raw materials to the lowest level in a quarter century has drawn to an end after supply constraints drove a recovery in everything from soybeans to zinc.

West Texas Intermediate crude oil fell 0.3 percent to $49.55 a barrel, after jumping 2.2 percent on Monday. U.S. government data due Wednesday is forecast to show crude stockpiles dropped for a third week, trimming a glut. Eni SpA said 65,000 barrels a day of supply was halted Friday after a militant attack in Nigeria.

Gold slipped 0.2 percent, trimming this month’s advance to 2.3 percent. Zinc fell 0.6 percent in London, retreating from its highest close since July 2015. Copper, nickel and aluminum slipped as much as 0.6 percent.

Currencies
The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index rose 0.1 percent, after ending the last session near to its lowest level in more than three weeks.

“A June rate hike is effectively off the table,” said Jason Wong, a currency strategist at Bank of New Zealand in Wellington. “The market is thinking that unless we get a strong bounce-back in employment, then July is not looking likely either.”

The Japanese yen dropped 0.3 percent, paring its gain for the first week of June to 2.7 percent. Australia’s dollar held near a four-week high before a central bank meeting that’s forecast to leave interest rates unchanged. The pound advanced 0.2 percent, after dropping 0.5 percent on Monday after polls showed Britons favor leaving the European Union ahead of a June 23 referendum.

Malaysia ringgit appreciated 0.4 percent as recent gains in oil prices brightened prospects for Malaysia, Asia’s only major net exporter of crude. South Korea’s won surged as much as 1.8 percent versus the greenback as the currency caught up with gains in emerging-market currencies following Friday’s U.S. employment data, which came in worse than the lowest forecasts in a Bloomberg survey. Gains in developing-nation currencies were lost within a week the last three times U.S. payroll figures undershot estimates.

Bonds
U.S. Treasuries due in a decade were little changed, yielding 1.73 percent. Similar-maturity Australian government bonds were also steady and yielded 2.17 percent, near an all-time low.

New Zealand’s 10-year swap rate dropped five basis points to a record 2.795 percent as trading resumed following a holiday. [Bloomberg]

FTSE 100 Outlook and Prediction

FTSE 100 Prediction
FTSE 100 Prediction

Recently after a bull Monday we have been having a bearish Tuesday so we may well see them appear today with a bit more gusto than they had yesterday. I have resistance on the 10min chart at 6290 from a rising channel, and then 6313 for R1. Above that we have the Bianca channels at 6324 and 6336, so a short around the 6330 area is probably worth a go. The coral trend line on the daily chart is still red so a dip down towards 6220 would fit in with a decent looking plan. The bulls were helped last night by Yellen’s speech, in which she said a July rate hike wasn’t likely. On the bearish side, 6220 is support so if they break that then a trip down to 6120 is possible, though the S&P looks like it wants to test the 2134 area where we have the top of the Bianca channels – if so then that will take the FTSE higher than the 6300 area. So, bit of a mixed bag on the bigger picture with a case for rises and falls. However, for today I am watching 6260 for initial support, 6220 below that, and 6325 for resistance.

40 Comments

  1. And here we are, hit right on Nick’s 6325 and pulled back, but hardly at all.
    Should be a no prob short which I am, but not piling in just yet, rather suspicious of those crazy germans..

    1. Weak hands maybe, but took a handful on the last short and now all square and watching for 15 minutes.

      1. Out of 10.8 at 9.8 for one nice big juicy point :0)….slowly starting to overcome my fear of shorts at last…..good luck chaps…I’m having a break now…..

  2. Losing the will to live trying to post on here. 🙁
    Non event on the GDP revision, holding a small short for something to do.
    These are the sort of market conditions that the iii guy in WSF’s link about “bunny” markets was on about.
    Currently standing still staring into headlamps.
    DAX nearly reached my target of 285 but FTSE not particularly interested. Or interesting.
    Downside ftse target this morning I suppose is 300.

    1. Agree tmfp, on days like this it is a punt not a trade. By rights I should chop everything whilst it is not costing me anything significant and go and earn some money from normal work! That said, I wont, so run it until the Dow unless something happens before….which it wont.
      Good luck boys.

    2. Had a feeling the germans might keep pushing on this morning, still no sign of us being able to break the 25 though. If they went to 10400 we’d probably still be around 25….

  3. At least got 20 points on the way up, Dax since 9.15, should have kept as usual, would be 50 now. Anyway, bit by bit. I think I got out cos I couldn’t half a position and didn’t want to lose 3:1 gain. Ah, it’s all pointless anyway. One day you win another give it all back.

  4. Morning all,this is an american piece on the ECB Company Bond purchase scheme,how much it could be,how long it could last,who could benefit etc etc,
    “the ECB will just buy up to 70% of any new corporate bond issuance.
    The ECB unveiled its latest cunning plan some months ago, when global investors were begging for a bone to chew on, but the bond purchases are scheduled to begin in earnest this Thursday. To be eligible for this new central banking welfare scheme, the bonds must be issued by non-bank corporations established in the euro area. ”
    http://thecrux.com/helicopter-money-drops-on-europe-but-not-for-normal-folks/

  5. FTSE shorts closed at 05, Difference added short at 11672. Looking for a bit of profit taking!!
    I really should be out in the sun, this is dull!

    1. Sorry, Senu wish I could be more optimistic but it doesn’t look likely right now, does it?

  6. And the DOW at last.
    Scheduled to open about 40 up around 960, next target on the upside is April highs at 18170. Might pull back to high 800’s, but it’s difficult to see a technical reason for it to go down much further.
    Ftse looks tired today, I think it would need something stellar from the US to get us back to the day’s highs.

    My mind is in the sun and on the road, why I didn’t just leave that short to run this morning I don’t know. 80 and now is a perfect place/time to have covered it, not sure about longing here though.

    1. Picked up a bit of cheap at 76 in the end, don’t know whether we’ll get to 18000 this push, but looks on, and as I type here we are.
      Ftse shows not a lot of enthusiasm so out for +12 and a small short.

      1. and out of short for +10. Neutral to vaguely bullish here but only if the DOW gets into the 18000’s with a bit of go in it, otherwise dullsville till the close.

        1. They’ll keep having a go at getting it through 18,000 I reckon but I think it is a bit of a squeeze. It’ll be interesting at the Dow close to see what they try to get it to close at.
          short more difference at 11700.

        2. Bizarre 10 pts out of nowhere on the ftse, shows how thin trading is… it will make sense if the dow gets into the 18000’s but cart before horse really.
          Short at 94 anyway but will cut it quick as Dow may run on IF it break 18000.

          1. Yep, it feels sooooo squeezy. Likewise, will cut sharpish if it runs through too much.

          2. I don’t like the conjunction of MHH and probable 18000 break so out of short for nothing and watching for the time being.
            Finding this bloody hard work, lack of rythym.

    1. Not a clue what I’m doing here at this time of the night but it is now working fine nick! You obviously work far too hard for all of us freeloaders!!

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