Good morning. Yesterday played out pretty well with the support level at 6885 holding (though it looked a bit dubious for a short while!) and a strong rise off the back of it, while the S&P pushed ahead (and is still likely to be heading for that 2140 area). The FTSE bulls need to break 6990 if they are going to push towards the 7150 area but not sure that today will be the day for that. Not too much coming out on the news front today, but there is a US confidence report at 3pm which is forecast to be 95.9, same a previous and might have a small effect on the prices at that time.
US & Asia Overnight from Bloomberg
Chinese shares slid, cutting their gains since an interest-rate cut in half, while the dollar pared its fifth straight weekly retreat. Asian bonds followed gains in the U.S. and Europe, while oil headed toward its longest rising streak in 32 years.
The Shanghai Composite Index tumbled 2 percent by 12 p.m. in Tokyo, trimming its advance since China cut rates this week to 2 percent. The MSCI Asia Pacific Index fluctuated and Standard & Poor’s 500 Index futures were little changed after an all-time high. The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index trimmed its drop since May 8 to 1 percent. Australian and Japanese bond yields fell. U.S. crude dropped, trimming its ninth straight weekly advance.
Chinese shares, which more than doubled over the last 12 months, are paring gains on concern that a slew of initial public offerings will tie up funds amid weak economic growth. With disappointing economic data damping the outlook for higher U.S. interest rates, the weaker dollar buoyed the outlook for U.S. exporters and drove the S&P 500’s first increase this week. Bond markets took a breather from the selloff that has erased more than $400 billion in value the past three weeks.
“China remains a concern,” Tim Schroeders, a portfolio manager who helps oversee about $1 billion in equities at Pengana Capital Ltd. in Melbourne, said by phone. “We need to see an improvement in the economy and a bottoming out of the property market.”
China Outlook
China reported a 10.5 percent jump in foreign-direct investment in April, beyond even the most optimistic estimate. House-price data for April is due Monday. Policy makers announced their third interest-rate cut in six months last weekend as they strive to reinvigorate growth.
The Shanghai Composite dropped more than 5 percent last week, its first such retreat since the beginning of March. The Hang Seng China Enterprises index, which tracks mainland companies listed in Hong Kong, dropped 0.5 percent Friday to take its fourth straight weekly retreat to 2.4 percent.
Seven of the 10 industry groups on the Asia-Pacific stock gauge climbed this week. An MSCI gauge of emerging-market equities is little changed for the week.
Japan’s Topix index rose 0.4 percent, set for a weekly gain of 0.6 percent. Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 Index climbed 0.4 percent, bringing its increase since May 8 to 1.5 percent.
The Kospi index in Seoul erased gains to drop 0.6 percent after the Bank of Korea left key interest rates on hold. Three-year Korean bond yields rose four basis points, or 0.04 percentage point, to 1.90 percent.
Dollar Weakness
Bloomberg’s dollar gauge, which tracks the U.S. currency against 10 major peers, was little changed near a four-month low. The measure slid 0.3 percent Thursday to close at its lowest level since Jan. 21.
The dollar has retreated after climbing nine straight months through March on speculation the first rate increase in almost a decade was looming. Lackluster U.S. economic reports have forced investors to push back bets on the timing of the Federal Reserve’s liftoff.
The greenback was steady at $1.1408 per euro, headed for a weekly drop of 1.9 percent. The euro briefly trimmed gains Thursday after European Central Bank President Mario Draghi pledged to implement its bond-buying program “in full.”
New Zealand’s dollar weakened 0.3 percent to 74.74 U.S. cents, falling for the first time in four days. The Australian dollar declined a second day, losing 0.3 percent to 80.58 U.S. cents and trimming its gain in the week to 1.5 percent, still the most since March.
Yields Fall
Japanese 10-year yields dropped three basis points to 0.415 percent, while rates on Australian 10-year bonds slipped seven basis points to 2.93 percent. Yields on New Zealand government notes due in a decade fell for the first time in four days, declining four basis points to 3.72 percent.
Ten-year Treasury yields were little changed at 2.23 percent after slipping six basis points last session, when rates on 10-year German debt dropped two basis points to 0.70 percent, their first decline this week. More than $400 billion has been wiped off the value of global bonds in May, led by a rout in bunds amid speculation inflation is recovering.
Investors in the U.S. and Europe clamored to buy securities at government debt auctions this week, even as prices of outstanding bonds tumbled in secondary-market trading.
West Texas Intermediate crude fell 0.3 percent to $59.73 a barrel, paring its gain in the week to 0.5 percent after data showed the biggest drop in U.S. refinery activity in four months cut crude demand.
Oil Supply
Refinery utilization slowed by 1.8 percentage points last week, the biggest decline since Jan. 16, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said Wednesday. Oil supply from both the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries and U.S. shale drillers is set to expand later this year, weighing on prices, hedge fund manager Pierre Andurand said.
Wheat futures for July delivery added 0.3 percent to $5.155 a bushel on the Chicago Board of Trade, after surging 6.8 percent Thursday, the biggest jump for a most-active contract since June 25, 2012. Prices climbed on speculation hedge funds exited record bearish bets amid concern that storms will damage crops in the U.S., the world’s top exporter. [Ref]
FTSE Outlook and Forecast

Well here we are again with another “Funny Friday”. Today has initial resistance clustered at around the 6985/6995 area so I think any initial rise might stall in this area. Above this area we have the Bianca channel tops at 7037 for the 20 day and 7064 for the 10 day. The 6990 level is the daily 25ema, and technically the daily EMAs are still bearish. Pivot level for today is 6948 so there is support from that, though the 200ema on the 30min at 6966 might well hold, at least initially for a push towards that 6990 area. It will be interesting to see what happens at this level as if the bears start to pile in then a decline to the pivot, and possibly the bottom oft he 30minute channel at 6915 (and a slightly lower channel at 6900) might well be on the cards. I am inclined to try a small short (as its Friday, reduced stakes) at the 6990 area. The ASX200 (Australia) followed a similar pattern to what I am thinking for the FTSE with a rise and then a dip. If the pivot holds (6948) then we could revisit 7000 and see 7150 next week (which might tally with the S&P hitting 2140) before larger declines.
Morning all. Options expiry today. Will we see 7025 today (where there’s a daily gap to fill)?
Thanks for reminding us ZZ, last o/e day we spiked to about 7012, dropped like a stone for 90 points and recovered it all back the next day.
We had a rejection of the high the day before (16 Apr). Yesterday we had a rejection of the low – opposite forces at play meaning more up today maybe?
Typo there, 7112….that was Bloomberg crash day, wasn’t it?
When 7100 was an ATM sell, ah, the good old days 🙂
Damp squib. Back to paint dry watching 🙁
Yea – really boring … slow grind up for the rest of the day?
Absolutely no idea.
I’m operating on super sensitive 1m 6 period rsi and still only closed 4 trades this morning.
Had a platform short @ 15 for an option spike, that missed 🙁
I’m patiently waiting for 7025 to exit longs
Why 25?
Monday’s low was 7025. We gapped down on Tuesday on the daily chart. FTSE often loves to fill these gaps. (We had a similar election gap at 6886/7 which it filled this week). It’s not a 100 percenter but if we don’t do it today then maybe on a Monday spike up?
Fair enough logic.
I don’t know how you guys can run long positions over weekends with the Greek Black Swan preparing for takeoff any day. I wouldn’t sleep.
I’ll probably exit them later today if it looks like it’s going to be a tease again. Just Friday pms can sometimes be quite bullish.
Make that four and a half, long 99.5, 2 point stop lol
and out at 4.3 let’s go on the lash
Option expiry time is coming up now-ish
lets see what happens
Well — nice and regular, but not going anywhere in particular? 😀
And for this reason I didn’t short yesterday because many people would. And I did in the past and it resulted in what we see today. I thought yesterday if I short now, Friday will give one more almighty push up to spoil cards. Soon we will hear the stories here: where this price is going? At the moment where it lands there it lands. For Dow even 18500 is possible. Timing is not an issue.
Noticed an interesting bit of TA on the monthly chart for the FTSE. The analysis compares the Bollinger bands with Keltner channels. The Bollinger bands are the buff colours in the charts and the Keltner channels are the blue ones. http://s172.photobucket.com/user/zigzagger2/media/FTSE%202015_zpsrpuum9fn.png.html
Usually the Bollinger bands are either side of the Keltner channels. When the Bollinger bands move inside the Keltner channels it’s suggesting that a sizeable move is coming up. What it doesn’t say is which way it’s going to move. The Bollinger bands moved inside the Keltner channels in about November/December last year. The last time (on the monthly charts) that they did this was back in 2000. You can see what happened next.
http://s172.photobucket.com/user/zigzagger2/media/FTSE%202000_zpserjvaf5t.png.html
Those charts are interesting! Wonder if the same scenario will play out again?
I’d like to see some kind of big bearish engulfing candle on the monthly to give us a clue that the direction might be south. At the moment (though I can’t bring myself to believe it) the direction suggests more up. Second half of the year (at least until October) is usually the weaker. With Grexit/Brexit and interest rate rises on the horizon there are probably too many headwinds to sustain a move north.
tmpfp – you up to anything ?? That RSI on the 1 min keeps poking lower lows…
Thinking DJ need to hold above 13225..
Yes mate, catching falling knives all over the place….
Trading 20 buy/45 sell on the 2min 10 period atm
Will stay something like that until the 10 min gets above 50
30 now
Que ?!! Trading 20 buy/45 sell .
Maybe going to pivot at 6945
No Hugh, 20 and 45 on the rsi 🙂
Long at 50
out at 58
Now I get it …
Definitely seems to want to visit the PP
Order in at 6946
short 63
out at 48
The rsi levels are for entry only, I choose when to come out of trades
little and often 🙂
Short at 55 I will keep with these settings until they go wrong then reassess
using a 6 point stop in these conditions
out at 41
Reassess time Should be the lows for now
Sub 15 10 min rsi usually bounces
long 38
2min rsi bounced 3 times off 25
rally time?
took 6
That should read 30 not 25
Out at 55
now going 30/70 2min as 10 min crossed 30 see the logic?
Short coming up around 60
Yep – Liking what your doing…
short 66 8 point stop will add at 72 beware mad half hour though
how much short covering will there be?
thats on the 66 short
That’s where I got Closed my Short ! Long 6963 – broken above 30 MA
Stopped out – @ 55
Thanks – tmpf – wondering what that stands for !
Finally, manage to enter long at 6941 seems to be paying off, will take profit at 6966
That was a fun end to the week after a slow morning.
Have a good weekend y’all, and if you see a motorbike being ridden like a hooligan please give him some space, it’ll probably be me 🙂
What do you ride mate? I’ll be on the 08 CBR 600RR tomorrow.
TT in two weeks too 🙂