Bullish start FTSE 100 6969 resistance | 6880 support | Asian stocks rise

FTSE 100 Support 6884 6883 6875 6873 6826 6814
FTSE 100 Resistance 6940 6969 6990 7007 7034

Good morning, I hope you had a good weekend. Cant believe we are into Q4 of this year already – doesn’t time fly! Could be an interesting one too to close out the year, and ahead of the triggering of article 50 next quarter as is now going to be the case. At least the market will like the more definitive action plan. The FTSE 100 rebounded well on Friday, from the 6810 low, mainly driven by relief that Deutsche Bank might not be doomed, after their US fine was reduced. The bulls broke through both the resistance levels at 6868 and 6903, so now the momentum has swung back in their favour – choppy at the moment isn’t it!

US & Asia Overnight from Bloomberg

  • German lender’s U.S. fine reported to be less than feared
  • U.K.’s May says Brexit process to start by end of March

Asian stocks rose and regional bonds fell as concern about Deutsche Bank AG’s finances eased after the lender was reported to be lining up a less-costly settlement with U.S. regulators than investors had feared. Brexit angst weighed on the pound and oil declined.

Financial shares helped the MSCI Asia Pacific Index recoup more than half of Friday’s loss, after the S&P 500 Index advanced in the last session. Sterling slid versus most of its major peers after British Prime Minister Theresa May said she’ll start pulling the U.K. out of the European Union in the first quarter of 2017. Crude retreated from a six-week high as U.S. producers increased drilling, while New Zealand’s 10-year bond yield rose from a three-week low. Markets in China, Malaysia and South Korea were shut for holidays on Monday.

Relief spread across U.S. and European equity markets on Friday as Agence France-Presse reported that Deutsche Bank was nearing a $5.4 billion settlement with the American Department of Justice, less than half the amount initially sought in connection with a probe into mortgage-backed securities. The financial woes of Germany’s biggest lender as it struggles with tougher capital standards and soaring legal bills adds to a list of market risks that includes Brexit and tightening U.S. monetary policy.

“Investors were nervous about the uncertainty surrounding Deutsche Bank and the potential spillover effect on other European banks, but the mood is to take a wait-and-see approach for now,” said Yutaka Miura, senior technical analyst at Mizuho Securities Co. in Tokyo

Japan’s quarterly Tankan index of sentiment among large manufacturers came in slightly weaker than economists had expected, a report showed Monday. China’s official manufacturing purchasing managers’ index steadied at the highest level in almost two years and services picked up, data showed over the weekend. South Korea reported a bigger-than-expected drop in exports for September, ahead of the release of manufacturing gauges for the U.S. and the euro area.

Stocks

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index rose 0.6 percent as of 1:50 p.m. Tokyo time, after falling 1.1 percent in the last session. Financial shares accounted for about a quarter of the move, buoyed by Deutsche Bank’s 6.4 percent surge in Germany on Friday. The German lenders’ shares sank to a record low last week and are still down more than 50 percent from where they were a year ago.
“Concern about Deutsche Bank is far from over,” said Nicholas Teo, a strategist at KGI Fraser Securities in Singapore, said by phone. “Systemic risk is a real possibility with the derivatives exposure that plagues Deutsche.”

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index climbed to a one-month high with trading volumes about 50 percent below their 30-day average amid holidays in states including New South Wales. Benchmarks in Hong Kong, Indonesia and Japan rose more than 1 percent.
Galaxy Entertainment Group Ltd. rallied more than 3 percent in Hong Kong after Macau reported a bigger-than-expected increase in its gambling revenue for September. China Overseas Land & Investment Ltd. slid to a two-week low after local governments in seven Chinese cities tightened home-buying rules. CapitaLand Ltd., Singapore’s biggest developer, fell as much as 1.9 percent after a report showed the city-state’s home prices dropped in the last quarter by the most in seven years. Kawasaki Heavy Industries Ltd. tumbled 11 percent in Tokyo after the company slashed its profit forecast.

Futures on the S&P 500 Index were little changed, after the underlying measure rallied 0.8 percent on Friday. Contracts on the U.K.’s FTSE 100 Index gained 0.2 percent.

Currencies

The pound dropped as much as 0.5 percent versus the dollar and lost 0.3 percent against the euro after May told delegates at her Conservative Party’s annual conference that she’ll invoke Article 50 of the EU’s Lisbon Treaty — the formal trigger for two-years of exit talks — by the end of March. Sterling tumbled the most on record to a more than 30-year low in the wake of the June vote in favor of Brexit.“We’re back to the Brexit risks,” said Vishnu Varathan, a senior economist at Mizuho Bank Ltd. in Singapore. “The sterling has taken a bit of knock first. If the concerns become wider concerns about financial market contagion we will find that the slight softening that we’ve seen in the dollar trend will be shaken off.”

New Zealand’s dollar weakened 0.3 percent before Fonterra’s Global DairyTrade whole milk powder auction on Tuesday. Milk is the South Pacific nation’s No. 1 export and prices fell when the fortnightly sale was last held on Sept. 20.

The offshore yuan was little changed at 6.6762 per dollar in its first trading session since the Chinese currency was added to the International Monetary Fund’s Special Drawing Rights on Saturday. Onshore markets are shut for all of this week.

Commodities

Crude oil fell 0.7 percent to $47.90 a barrel after rising 8 percent over the previous three sessions as OPEC members forged a preliminary agreement to reduce output. The number of rigs targeting crude in the U.S. rose for a fifth consecutive week, Baker Hughes Inc. said Friday. Iran wants to increase exports to 2.35 million barrels a day in the coming months, state news agency IRNA reported.

Gold was little changed after sliding 1.6 percent last week, the most since July.

Bonds

New Zealand’s 10-year bond yield rose by four basis points to 2.33 percent and Japan’s added one basis point to minus 0.075 percent. The rate on similar-maturity U.S. Treasuries increased by one basis point to 1.60 percent, after gaining three basis points on Friday. [Bloomberg]

FTSE 100 Outlook and Prediction

FTSE 100 Prediction
FTSE 100 Prediction

With the rise on Friday the bulls have some good support at around the 6875/6885 area for today. Its also essentially the start of the month so we ‘usually’ get a bit of a kick up as the new money flows in. There is resistance at 6969 where we have the 10 day Bianca channel, the 10 day Raff just below the 7000 level – a push to around these levels might result in some stutters, while the 20 day Raff is at 7035. The bulls will be keen on 7000 while they have the momentum. If we get an initial dip instead, down to the 6880 area then a long is worth it here I feel, but equally if this level breaks then flip to a short for a run down to 6826 where we have S1. The 2 hour chart I am looking at is bullish for the moment, also with support at 6873 and 6883, hence my long bias from this area. I still think we will get a bigger leg down soon, but rather than it starting last week maybe we pop a bit higher first then drop. So, slightly confusing picture really, but am watching 6880 area to hold as support, and 6969 as resistance, with 6990 and 7030 above that.

37 Comments

  1. Morning all, I longed gbp/used this am, I’m about 70pts the wrong way so far. Stop set to 12799.

    Added a few shorts to FTSE, think we could see 7050 area though.

    Very hungover – need a full English !

  2. morning all.
    Not sure how I ended up so short the ftse…

    Shame about your hangover Morko – what you doing partying on a sunday night ?? 🙂

    1. No not Sunday drinking,I’m almost 40 and can’t hack it anymore. Friday and Saturday were heavy!!!.

      I’m in quite large on the FTSE short..will fall at some point.

  3. 88% of people are short according to IG index – 12% must be happy…
    The week £ is helping.. Deuctch Bank old news, whats a few trillion in bad debts lol

  4. Ive just come back to spreadbetting after a break and been profitable last few weeks, mainly selling the rallies. Found this site recently and am impressed with Nicks Analysis so far. Today I am short at 6961. Surely this will come crashing down at as all time high now.

  5. Hello guys.
    Woke up this morning and fancied my first trade since Brexit.
    A bit of a mix of TA (loved that Friday candle) and Fundamental made me long at the open, dumped half at 80 and running the balance, 40 stop.
    I think the FTSE will continue to be comparatively strong against the other two for the forseeable, due to the fact that Sterling looks bound for at least euro if not dollar parity as the Brexit implications become more obvious.

    I can’t believe how quiet the DAX is tickwise. DB indigestion?
    Stay well all.

    1. tmfp!!!! Nice to have you back!!! 🙂
      You doing well ?

      I’m hoping the ftse retraces to the 50% of the move at the moment…

      (german bank holiday btw)

      1. Hello mate, ah, didn’t realise it’s a German BH thanks, I thought it was super quiet lol.
        Yeah tricky one, as you know I’m never slow to short but as I said, the dominant factor imo will be continuing sterling weakness making multinational FTSE companies cheap buys.
        And I reckon this week, with a bit of encouragement from the DOW (and no further DB selling), could see the FTSE well over 7000. Those short figures confirm a lot of squeezable positions about.

        1. But, otoh, when it looks its strongest is always the best time to be prepared to short.
          Take some balls, good timing and some good maths for the stop around here though.

          1. Hi Nick, I’m fine thanks, you too I hope.
            Converted some worthless sterling into a nice little house near Potes and back in the UK for a while, so decided on a bit of a flutter.
            I know it must be a bit confusing, me coming back as a bull, but for the time being I can’t see substained downside (and a pop up to unch on the DOW @308 today will see us 720 tonight).
            Gl as always.

  6. Hi all, i am short from 6995. I think the market may reach 7010 but even then i shall add more shorts.Today we will be looking at a drop to 6940 at least by 4.00pm. So anyone that is short hold your nerve.

  7. Looks like the drop happended quicker than i thought. I think im done for the day.good day all.

  8. So what are we expecting then?

    A heavy drop down the well of desires; where man findeth his ancient libido?

    Or a boost back up past 7000, proving the delusions of grandeur inherent in the strangled noose of the old woman?

    1. Haha very eloquent!
      And I’ve no idea where its going next 🙂
      Seemed like the ftse was floating the dow earlier… perhaps a drop now ftse closed ??

      Though the ‘why’ of a drop escapes me – nothing particularly new on the horizon.

  9. Well I have pulled a few at 6962 …safety first and all that, next pull point for me will be 6930.

    Getting nailed on my gbpusd trade…I’m only in small so gonna let it ride. I did average in so Newcastle about a 40pt rise to B/E

Comments are closed.