Support 6700, 6675, 6654, 6635 Resistance 6708, 6738, 6777, 6800, 6841

Good morning. Here we are then, 1st December already. Will we get a Santa Rally this year? Which of the banks will get their year end predictions delivered? I think the ones [predicting 7100+ might be a bit far of the mark but you never know! We have some weak Chines manufacturing data overnight which has dragged the FTSE prices down a little, and to be honest I still expect that early December might see a little dip anyway. Looking at the S&P again, I think a test of the daily 25ema at 2041 now is possible, before a year end rally. Oil continues to fall, dropping below $70 a barrel, cynically I’m thinking that its another measure designed to hurt Russia.

Asia Overnight from Bloomberg
Asian stocks fell with U.S. index futures as a Chinese manufacturing gauge dropped, American holiday spending slowed and oil tumbled to a five-year low. Malaysia’s ringgit headed for the biggest two-day retreat since 1998 and precious metals slumped.

The MSCI Asia Pacific Index (MXAP) fell 0.9 percent by 2:20 p.m. in Tokyo, with Standard & Poor’s 500 Index futures dropping 0.4 percent. West Texas Intermediate crude lost 2.4 percent to $64.59 a barrel, sending Australian energy stocks toward the biggest three-day loss since the global financial crisis. Gold sank as Swiss voters rejected a measure to force the central bank to hold bullion. The Bloomberg-JPMorgan Asia Dollar Index fell to a four-year low as the ringgit weakened 1.5 percent.

Collapsing oil prices are damping inflation expectations and pushing global commodity indexes to multi-year lows. U.S. consumers cut spending by an estimated 11 percent over the post-Thanksgiving weekend. China’s official factory index fell to 50.3 for November, below the 50.5 reading projected by economists, while a private gauge from HSBC Holdings Plc and Markit Economics came in at 50, the border between expansion and contraction.

“Concerns about disinflation and deflation are being fueled by what we’re seeing in energy and commodity markets at this point in time,” Richard Gibbs, global head of economics at Macquarie Group Ltd., Australia’s largest investment bank, said in a Bloomberg TV interview in Sydney. “Clearly the decision by the Saudis to not even countenance a cut in production has strong geopolitical undertones.”

‘Shock Therapy’
Saudi Arabia, the biggest oil exporter among the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries, was a driving force behind the 12-member group’s decision last week to hold production steady. The oil minister of Iran, which advocated for an output cut, said in an interview late last week that the “shock therapy” of a steep decline in prices is no solution to OPEC’s loss of market share to U.S. shale producers. Brent crude fell 2.6 percent today to $68.34 a barrel, a four-year low.

U.S. equity-index futures signaled a second day of decline for the S&P 500 as a surge in Thanksgiving Day holiday sales failed to carry through the Black Friday weekend. Contracts on the Dow Jones Industrial Average and Nasdaq 100 Index slipped at least 0.3 percent.

Gains by consumer stocks such as Wal-Mart Stores Inc. and Target Corp. on Nov. 28 tempered the biggest one-day rout in energy stocks in three years.

Consumer spending fell to $50.9 billion over the four Days through Nov. 30, down from $57.4 billion in 2013, the National Retail Federation said today in a statement. It’s the second year in a row that sales declined during the period, which had long been famous for long lines and frenzied crowds.

Asian Equities
Eight of the 10 industry groups on the Asia-Pacific stock gauge fell today, led by energy and materials producers. Airlines had the biggest gains today.

Hong Kong’s Hang Seng Index retreated 1.7 percent and a gauge of Chinese shares in the city slipped 1.3 percent. The Shanghai Composite Index climbed 0.9 percent for an eighth day of gains even as offshore investors briefly became net sellers of mainland Chinese shares through the connection with Hong Kong.

Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 (AS51) Index slid 2 percent, with a subindex that includes oil companies tumbling 6.4 percent today. The energy gauge is down more than 15 percent in the last three sessions, it’s largest drop since October 2008. Materials and energy stocks make up about 20 percent of the benchmark measure.

Commodity Currencies
The Australian dollar weakened 0.6 percent to 84.53 U.S. cents and the country’s 10-year government bond yield dropped below 3 percent for the first time since October 2012. The Markit iTraxx Australia index of credit-default swaps gained 1.5basis points to 92 basis points as of 11:31 a.m. in Sydney, Citigroup prices showed.

The Bloomberg Dollar Spot Index was little changed after rising to its highest level since March 2009. Norway’s krone, the worst-performing major currency against the U.S. dollar this quarter, slipped 0.1 percent, South Africa’s rand retreated 0.4 percent and Canada’s dollar declined 0.1 percent.

Japan’s yen fell to a seven-year low of 119.03 per dollar today. That boosted shares of exporters like Toyota Motor Corp. and camera maker Canon Inc., propelling the Topix index to a 0.5 percent advance.

The ringgit led losses in emerging markets today, falling to 3.4353 per dollar, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. It earlier reached 3.4392, the weakest since February 2010. The crude-exporting country’s currency has dropped 2.7 percent in two days, the biggest such decline since June 1998.

Optimism ‘Difficult’
The Asian Dollar Index dropped 0.1 percent to 113.47, the lowest level since Sept. 20, 2010. South Korea’s won slipped 0.5 percent. Indonesia’s rupiah weakened 0.6 percent as a HSBC manufacturing gauge fell to 48 last month, the lowest level since the measure was introduced in 2011.

Copper fell to a four-year low as a rout in the energy market drove raw materials lower. The metal for delivery in three months tumbled as much as 1.9 percent to $6,230.75 a metric ton on the London Metal Exchange before trading at $6,266.

“The substantial adjustment to oil prices continues to be a drag on other commodities,” said Hou Jun, a Shenzhen-based strategist at Citic Futures Co., a unit of China’s biggest listed brokerage. “It’s difficult to be optimistic on commodities going into 2015 as policy differentiation continues to support the dollar in a low inflation environment while growth outside the U.S. remains under pressure.”

Gold for immediate delivery fell as much as 2.1 percent to $1,142.88 an ounce, the lowest level since Nov. 7, before trading at $1,152.33. Silver lost as much as 6.7 percent.

A proposal that would have required the Swiss National Bank to hold at least 20 percent of its assets in bullion was voted down by 77 percent to 23 percent in a referendum yesterday. [ref]

FTSE Outlook

FTSE 100 Prediction
FTSE 100 Prediction

Today pivot is at 6708 and I am expecting a bit of a weaker day today, despite it being the start of a new month. I think there will be an initial rise first thing as the new monthly money flows in, but then a dip down to 6675. I have plotted a possible overshoot on that drop to the bottom of that declining 30 minute channel though I am thinking that the 6675 area will hold. The 10 day raff channel is now heading down, and we are breaking below the Bianca channels having repeatedly tested the bottom of those channels most of last week. We are also within a declining 10 minute channel, hence my bias for an initial dip this morning. I have put the long in the trade plan as per the solid arrows, but just bear i9n mind the dotted ones for a possible play of that 6675 support level breaks.

48 Comments

  1. Hi chaps –
    Just an update from post earlier for those interested.

    T2 = 6608 T3 = 6590
    But I would take profits at 6630 T1 as it will probably get to 6664 or 6686
    before it gets to T2 / T3

  2. Yes, I agree with that RC, thanks for the update!
    Had an alert on for 6650, got it this morning, went long @46, and few minutes later out @70, that was nice quick gift from the morning market, and now observing, I think we need a little pull back for all markets before a Santa Rally, as Santa been Rallying too much during November and need to take a breath before next up 🙂

  3. Would be nice to see markets recover today, to get a chance to get some shorts in for later this week I think. Does that sound like a good plan for this week?

  4. If it does hit that bottom 6635, my swing trade is limited and done for the week nice and early, then its all about waiting for Friday and the Santa Rally.

      1. Sorry I meant Thursday this week, but read below, this does add up:

        (it also fits nicely with the past 10 years where the Santa Rally kicks in for the FTSE around mid December)

        http://www.fool.co.uk/investing/2014/11/28/why-there-is-still-time-for-a-ftse-100-santa-rally-this-year/

        His recent claim that the ECB’s Governing Council is “unanimous in its commitment to use other unconventional instruments,” has fired rumours that it will finally launch a blitz of bond purchases at its next meeting on Thursday, December 4th.

        If Draghi does deliver (and it’s still very much in the balance), then Santa will surely fly.

  5. Hi guys, missed the morning fall. looks like the reversal for the day has happened. going with Nick’s dotted arrows

  6. called the gap down on friday, picked up a nice 60 pips on the way down with that DOW. Expecting to see some volatile movement, lots of data of this week + NFP. Don`t think we will see 10k on DAX this week personally

    1. Hi Ahwab, have you started real trading? still 10k is not too far when you see today’s morning raise from low.

      1. yeah. That 10k is just a whim, i`m not going to trade until i get some decent signals, but atm i am more inclined to go short than long.

  7. Yes, how DOW managed to hit 17892 on Friday and today 17720ish lowest…a lot of points missed there…

  8. Hi Senu

    All I can say is – The sell is at 6686 ( look at 28th Last remark )
    With T1 – 6634 T2 = 6608 T3 6590
    As Long as the Targets have not been hit & signal still on
    Chances are – Yes these Prices will be hit.

  9. If US, recovers and DOW recovers everything up exactly as last Friday, maybe buyers will give us a chance to add some shorts higher up…hence observing on side-line to see what US decides today…

  10. More downside still always the bigger risk especially way up here. Punters have been betting on QE, Black Friday, Santa Rally etc. Greed turns back to fear and buyers disappear. It’s still not collapsed yet either. Remember the market takes the stairs up and the elevator down. Markets having been hitting new highs so if the rule is sell high buy low why ever go long?!

    1. got @short DAX 9964 and DOW @ 17788 =P , reckon 2pp each, reckon with volatility i can build a bigger position. Sell the highs looks the deal atm.

      1. Same ahwab, i never trade with stops just simply add to position and build my book up. Paid off Friday and today. I’ll keep doing the same as/if it climbs up.

      1. I like these spikes today, as I have been expecting them…only FTSE has been more sensible ie no random spike up to 6700 today…

  11. very confusing pattern on Dow. the hardest to tell. – broadening triangle with slightly longish bias, hard to call.

  12. DOW & DAX playing trick burning out shorters, with those spikes, but the longer it holds on it stretches and stretches till it crashes…when we don’t expect…patience needed, and a breather needed to really move higher later…GLA 🙂

  13. I don’t believe in any Santa Rallies any more. all you end up is going long which is not right. Scalping could be long and shorts no matter what month it is.

  14. Down after market end, thanks closed those shorts now for 40pnts 🙂
    Don’t like to hold overnight…
    Agree Jack2

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