FTSE 100 Resistance 6955 | Support 6870 | Bearish | War | Asia declines

FTSE 100 Support 6916 6910 6902 6870 6865 6830
FTSE 100 Resistance 6935 6947 6955 6975 6986 7054

Good morning. Staying bearish was the right stance then as yesterday saw us stay below the 7000 level and a bit of fear has started coming into the market. There is a bit of war rhetoric starting as well as Russia and the West tensions escalate, and UK troops are deployed to Estonia in the largest deployment since the Cold War. Crude oil back below $50pb didn’t help the FTSE either, as OPEC looks unlikely to cut output. I’m staying bearish on the FTSE for the moment as think that we will get below 6900 today.

US & Asia Overnight from Bloomberg

Asian shares fell for a second day as investors assessed a mixed batch of earnings reports and oil held near a three-week low. The dollar strengthened versus most peers and bonds fell amid growing confidence that the Federal Reserve will raise interest rates this year.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index extended the last session’s retreat from a two-week high, led by declines in energy shares. Canon Inc., Cnooc Ltd. and Posco all fell after announcing results, while Samsung Electronics Co. rose. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index climbed to a seven-month high and U.S. Treasuries extended losses after American data on Wednesday showed pickups in new home sales and services activity. Crude oil traded below $50 a barrel amid doubts that OPEC will implement its first output cuts in eight years.

While almost 80 percent of S&P 500 Index companies to have reported earnings so far this month beat analysts’ estimates, positive surprises have been less common in Asia and Europe. Investors are also erring on the side of caution as they assess the likely trajectory of U.S. interest-rate hikes and the outcome of the American presidential election, with a Fed policy meeting and the vote both due in the next two weeks.

Asian equities “are trending sideways as the U.S. election nears and investors weigh the scenarios for the economy and monetary policy,” said Chris Weston, chief market strategist at IG Ltd. in Melbourne. “People are quite hesitant to put money to work ahead of the election just in case we see a re-run of Brexit,” he said, referring to Britain’s surprise vote in June to leave the European Union.

The U.S. is due to release updates on durable goods orders and the housing market on Thursday, while the U.K. has gross domestic product figures that will shed light on how the economy performed in the wake of the Brexit referendum. Companies reporting earnings include Google parent Alphabet Inc., Deutsche Bank AG and China Petroleum & Chemical Corp.

Stocks

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index was down 0.7 percent as of 1:39 p.m. Tokyo time, with a gauge of energy shares sliding 1.3 percent. Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index led losses among regional benchmarks with a 1.2 percent decline, while Japan’s Topix index retreated from its highest close since April.

Cnooc, China’s biggest offshore oil and gas producer, fell 3 percent after reporting a 15 percent drop in third-quarter sales and Bank of China Ltd. slipped to a one-week low following its results. Posco, South Korea’s largest steelmaker, tumbled as much as 4 percent despite posting its highest quarterly profit since 2013. Samsung Electronics, the world’s biggest smartphone maker, added 0.6 percent and Canon declined by the most in a month.

Futures on the S&P 500 Index fell 0.1 percent after the underlying benchmark retreated 0.2 percent on Wednesday. Contracts on the U.K.’s FTSE 100 Index lost 0.4 percent.

Currencies

The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index added less than 0.1 percent. It gained 0.2 percent in the last session as a purchasing managers’ index indicated the U.S. services sector is expanding at a faster pace than economists forecast and data showed new home sales in September were close to the highest level in almost nine years.
While traders see a less than one-in-five chance the Fed will raise rates at its Nov. 1-2 meeting, they are pricing in about 73 percent odds of a December move, futures prices show. That’s up five percentage points this week.

“The U.S. housing sales and PMI overnight are really supportive for the dollar,” said Stephen Innes, a senior trader at Oanda Asia Pacific Pte in Singapore. “We’re almost 75 percent priced in for the Fed rate hike so I’m really thinking that further dollar traction based on Fed rate hike expectations is quite limited. The market positioning is quite long right now.”

The yen was little changed at 104.49 per dollar, near a three-month low. The overwhelming majority of economists surveyed by Bloomberg News expect the Bank of Japan to keep stimulus unchanged when Governor Haruhiko Kuroda and the policy board meet Oct. 31-Nov. 1 to assess the progress of their new yield-control framework.

South Korea’s won weakened 0.7 percent and Mexico’s peso dropped 0.5 percent, the biggest losses among major currencies.

Commodities

Crude oil was little changed at $49.24 a barrel in New York, after sliding 1.6 percent on Wednesday as data showed a pickup in U.S. production. Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries officials will meet this week to try to resolve differences over how much individual members should pump once planned output reductions are in force, with Iraq among the list of countries saying it should be exempt from the cuts. The proposed limits will be put to the group for approval at a meeting next month in Vienna.

“The oil market hasn’t transitioned from a buyers market to a sellers market just yet,” said Jonathan Barratt, chief investment officer at Ayers Alliance Securities in Sydney. “It’s still in a range and it’s likely to hold near here as we head toward the November OPEC meeting.”

Copper, aluminum, nickel and tin all declined for the first time this week as a reportshowed profit growth at Chinese industrial companies moderated to 7.7 percent in September, following a 19.5 percent jump in August that was the biggest jump in three years.

Bonds

The yield on U.S. Treasuries due in a decade increased by one basis point to 1.81 percent ahead of an auction of seven-year notes, matching its highest level since June and exceeding the median year-end projection of 1.75 percent in a Bloomberg survey. Sovereign debt in the world’s biggest economy is saddling investors with losses for a third month as inflation expectations build and speculation mounts that a Fed rate rise is coming. “A rate hike is already implied in the market,” said Hideo Shimomura, the chief fund investor at Mitsubishi UFJ Kokusai Asset Management, which oversees about $115 billion. “Now it’s a good time to buy. I don’t fear an inflation risk in the U.S.”

New Zealand’s 10-year bonds fell, pushing their yield up by five basis points to 2.68 percent, the highest since May. Similar-maturity notes also retreated in Australia, Singapore and South Korea. [Bloomberg]

FTSE 100 Outlook and Prediction

FTSE 100 Prediction
FTSE 100 Prediction

It will probably come as no surprise but for now I am keeping my bearish vibe and expecting us to break below 6900 today. We have support at 6870 and then the bottom of the 20 day Raff at 6830 but not sure if we see that lower level today. It has been pretty weak overnight though. Initially I am expecting a bit of a rise towards the daily pivot 6955 and also to visit yesterdays closing price area before more downside. This decline certainly makes that rise on Tuesday to 7070 look more and more like a stop hunt!

If the bulls were to get the price above the 6955 area then 6986 is the next resistance area where we have the 200ema on the 30min chart. 6975 is above that for another test of the 100 Hull MA on the 2 hour chart. The ASX200 (Australia) trended down again all day today, so its possible that we will do the same again, thus making a rise to 6955 looking a bit 50/50. Shorting the rallies still is the plan!

53 Comments

        1. it was a BS rally and once FTSE struggled to break 6995 then it was time to double the size of my stakes.
          Took £9k out of this 🙂

  1. Morning guys. Hope you had a nice lie in Nick 🙂 .
    Well, kicked the ass out of that phoney run up and made loadsa money (got in a bit early and was £4k down at one point Ooo er).
    Bring it on 🙂

  2. Nice one chaps – I said the same thing about BS rise on last page… Unfortunately I bottled it at 7k and took profit way too early again…. will trust myself next time! 🙂

    1. It does look weak and vulnerable there’s no doubt. The problem is timing as usual.
      Not a market to be chased, I’d suggest biding your time and looking for entries on rallies, like this morning’s and tuesday’s.
      If/when 6900 goes, it could rock, that was big level in terms of the breakout after being previous strong resistance.
      Today is shaping up to be another bearish outside candle, especially if we close >920.

  3. And the DOW looking like having yet another go at breaking towards 18300+.
    One megacorp reporting better than average figures would do it.

      1. Yeah I’m keeping an RSI 84 short for the DOW opening.
        As Si says below, this seem purely random movements atm.

          1. I took +5, went short too early but never mind.
            Will wait for another rally in 80s or maybe 7000 you never know 🙂

    1. Dow short – screwed.
      Gold long – screwed.
      New-ish ftse short – screwed.

      All going to plan, then…

        1. Not just yet! 🙂
          So, as far as I can tell, the indices now love a strong dollar… Makes fomc meeting a bit intriguing.

  4. very interesting – the ftse is no longer getting stronger on the back of weak gbp actually.
    you could be right si…

  5. Why is trump still only 15.5/19.5 on the binary with all of those emails coming out every day about Clinton?

  6. Just had a near one…trading on my mobile and added a Dow short for a £5 stake. Went to positions and noticed that p&l was fluctuating by 100s. Couldn’t work it out, thought it was a software glitch then realised I was in for £55 pt. which for my size account is suicide!!! Any closed out a few quid up so all good.

    Got me thinking…what’s the biggest error you’ve all made (Si shorting FTSE at 6300 doesn’t count :). )

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