FTSE 100 Support 6965 | Resistance 7047 | Clinton emails again

FTSE 1oo Support 6973 6964 6954 6943 6919 6891
FTSE 100 Resistance 7003 7047 70517052 7087

Good morning I hope you had a good weekend. Am back from my half term break now so all set for the final furlong leading up to the election. Talking of which, the bulls had bit of a curve ball thrown at them on Friday afternoon with the FBI announcing that they are going to be reopening the email probe into Hillary Clinton. Caught her off guard with that one, and has seen her already narrow lead over Trump shrink further. All that said, since setting the 6950 low on Friday afternoon, the bulls have fought back a bit, and currently at 6985 as I write this, with that 100 Hull moving average on the 2 hour continuing to provide support for the moment. Today its going to be seeing how the markets properly react to this email news.

US & Asia Overnight from Bloomberg

Asian energy stocks fell with oil after the world’s biggest crude producers failed to agree on supply cuts, while rising metals prices in China spurred gains in mining shares and South Africa’s rand. Gold was buoyed by haven demand following the reopening of an FBI probe into Hillary Clinton.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Energy Index and crude both slipped to one-month lows after the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries ended two days of talks on Saturday without agreeing any individual quotas. A gauge of raw-materials producers climbed toward its highest level in almost four months as aluminum and zinc rallied to multi-year highs in Shanghai. Gold rose for a third day after a survey pointed to cooling support for Clinton before next week’s U.S. presidential election, while the rand gained versus major peers.

Global equities have lost ground in October as mixed corporate earnings meld with investor anxiety ahead of the Nov. 8 vote in the U.S. and expectations the Federal Reserve will hike interest rates before the year is out. The S&P 500 Index slid 20 points in about 40 minutes on Friday amid news the Federal Bureau of Investigation was again looking into Clinton’s use of private e-mail while secretary of state, an issue that has dogged her campaign. OPEC talks over two days in Vienna yielded little more than a promise that the world’s top oil producers would keep discussing ways to stabilize the market.

“Until the election, the general theme will be uncertainty, which will have implications not just on the stock market, but on the dollar and Treasuries,” said Chad Morganlander, a money manager in Florham Park, New Jersey at Stifel, Nicolaus & Co., which oversees about $180 billion. “The probability that was factored into the market and the global financial system was a Hillary Clinton victory – investors now need to square their books going into the election based on whatever new odds come out.”

Stocks

A gauge of energy shares on the MSCI Asia Pacific Index was down 0.2 percent as of 2:26 p.m Tokyo time, while a measure of raw-materials producers added 0.8 percent. About the same number of stocks rose as fell on the dollar-denominated benchmark, which was set to complete its first monthly loss since June.

Japan’s Topix index held near its highest level since April and the Shanghai Composite Index dropped for a fourth day. An index tracking Chinese companies’ shares in Hong Kong advanced for the first time in a week. Markets in India and the Philippines were shut for holidays.

AIA Group Ltd. shares slumped as much as 7.2 percent after China UnionPay Co. haltedcredit and debt card payments for most insurance policies in Hong Kong, making it harder to conduct transactions with Chinese visitors that accounted for about half of the company’s sales in the city. Nippon Yusen KK and Mitsui O.S.K. Lines Ltd. — Japan’s two largest shipping companies — surged at least 5 percent in Tokyo after they agreed to merge their container operations with those of third-ranked Kawasaki Kisen Kaisha Ltd., which declined less than 1 percent.

Futures on the S&P 500 Index added 0.3 percent, after earlier retreating as much as 0.4 percent. An ABC/Washington Post tracking survey released Sunday gave Clinton 46 percent support from likely voters, to Trump’s 45 percent. Clinton was ahead by 12 points a week earlier.

“The race remains very tight and markets are far too complacent about the end result,” said Matthew Sherwood, head of investment strategy in Sydney at Perpetual Ltd., which manages about $21 billion. “If the polls tighten more, or the FBI investigation dominates the headlines, there could be a recalibration in market prices this week.”

Commodities

Crude oil fell 0.4 percent to $48.52 a barrel in New York. OPEC ended a meeting on Friday without reaching a deal on country quotas, according to delegates who took part in the discussions. Major producers from outside OPEC finished talks with the group on Saturday without any supply commitments, Brazil’s Oil and Gas Secretary Marcio Felix said. Oil has fluctuated near $50 amid uncertainty about whether OPEC can implement the first supply cuts in eight years at its official November meeting.

“Talks over the weekend make it seem less likely there will be an agreement on production cuts,” said Ric Spooner, a chief market analyst at CMC Markets in Sydney. “The market has probably made a fair bit of the adjustment, but I wouldn’t be surprised to see oil fall further into the $47 range.”

Gold added 0.2 percent, after rallying 0.6 percent on Friday. The metal’s gains reflect “safe-haven buying after the FBI reopened its inquiry into Hillary Clinton’s use of a private e-mail server,” Australia & New Zealand Banking Group Ltd. analysts wrote in a note on Monday.

Aluminum and zinc extended their gains to the highest levels in more than two years in Shanghai as investors bet that strong domestic demand, surging coal prices and logistical issues will underpin prices.

Currencies

The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index, a gauge of the greenback against 10 major peers, added less than 0.1 percent after retreating 0.3 percent from a seven-month high in the last session. It’s climbed 2.2 percent this month, the biggest gain since May.

While the Fed is seen leaving policy unchanged at a review this week, futures prices indicate a 69 percent chance of an interest-rate hike at its December meeting, up from 59 percent at the end of September. American data on Monday are forecast to show personal spending and income both increased in September, based on Bloomberg surveys of economists.

The Mexican peso fluctuated near a two-week low versus the dollar, after three days of losses. Mexico’s currency tends to fall when U.S. presidential candidate Donald Trump gains ground in polls, reflecting concern about his pledges to renegotiate a free-trade agreement and deport millions of undocumented immigrants.

South Korea’s won held near a three-month low as President Park Geun-hye deals with an influence-peddling scandal that’s sparked calls by the ruling party for her to remove the prime minister. Prosecutors raided Park’s office over the weekend to investigate allegations her close friend Choi Soon-sil — a private citizen whom opposition lawmakers have linked to a religious cult — wielded influence on state affairs over an extended period. China’s yuan advanced 0.2 percent, paring its biggest monthly loss since May. The currency advanced from near a six-year low following Friday’s retreat in the dollar and as China’s clampdown on UnionPay payments for insurance products in Hong Kong provided support. The transactions have been used as a means of skirting capital controls to take funds out of the mainland.

Bonds

The yield on U.S. Treasuries due in a decade declined one basis point to 1.84 percent, after touching a five-month high of 1.88 percent on Friday. Sovereign debt in the world’s biggest economy has lost 1.2 percent on average this month, the worst performance since February 2015, a Bloomberg index shows.

The selloff in Treasuries may pause because the FBI’s investigation of Clinton could spur demand for the safest assets, said Hiroki Shimazu, an economist and strategist at the Japanese unit of MCP Asset Management in Tokyo.

China’s one-year interest-rate swaps rose four basis points to an 18-month high of 2.75 percent in Shanghai. The increase reflects speculation policy makers will seek to keep money rates high as they tackle asset bubbles and try to stem declines in the yuan. [Bloomberg]

FTSE 100 Outlook and Prediction

FTSE 100 Prediction
FTSE 100 Prediction

I am going for a bit of a bit of a bullish day, despite the Clinton email furore, for today, with a rise to the top of the Bianca channels at the 7050 level. Overnight the bulls have held on, despite weak fundamentals and uncertainty. Its certainly going to be choppy going into the election anyway. The SP has fought back from the initial 20 point drop as the news broke on Friday as well. For the FTSE the 30min chart actually looks fairly positive to start, and we still have bullish 2 hour and daily charts at the moment. However, with both the Bianca channels at the 7050 level this will be fairly key for the bulls to break, whilst the bears will need to break 6950 for further downside. So, with a favourable wind today we will get a rise to 7050 area for a decent short opportunity.

18 Comments

  1. Morning all, I can’t see the FTSE hitting 7050 today, but Nick your not often wrong so let’s wait and see.

    Would be a great area to add in heavy to my existing shorts. My account has grown a fair bit last few weeks so looking for a chance to ramp my stakes up on a safeish short

    1. Yes, its bit of a bold one. Maybe a short squeeze though? Cant see Carney leaving juts yet though… think he just wants to raise his profile a bit.

      1. Nick
        I seem to agree with you regarding the Up move, though I have
        7020 seems like a more reasonable area for the turn south

  2. Trying to work out market behaviour day before US election from past events. No real trends that I can see.

    I am going to watch live in case Trump wins and ready my shorts!

  3. Morning all.
    Seems a bit choppy – or perhaps I should say its not clearly following the correlations I usually watch. Done ok by being short so far.
    Watching 10682/90 for a possible dax short, but depends on the action moving into there and I think potentially it could move past and up to 10715.

    gl today

  4. Brave shout there Nick 7050. I shall take my hat off, may even eat it, if we get there today.
    My thoughts are 6950/7010 is the range to break, with the former a small favourite.
    I have no idea of the balance of pros and cons regarding the election and equity prices other than uncertainty usually being an equity negative.

      1. Funny you should say that, I shouldn’t but I’ve just bought a little bit at 63 with a stop at 50……in case it breaks 60!

          1. Yep, agreed matey, so I’ve upped the stop to 55 and limit at 85. Going to turn the machine off and go for a walk in the beautiful weather then get on with a real job that might actually create real money!

          2. The good thing about selling based on a down trend is that the stop gets lower. Out for +5 on the break of it
            70 next stop wow.

  5. Going by my bollingers, it seems the buyers will push the ftse to 6990. I will be looking to short heavy from there. I might even sell from 6980. Looking for a drop to 6930 today.

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