commodity

Daily Commodities Commentary 3.3.09

Posted in Futures, Options, commodities, commodities commentary, commodity, corn, crude, gold, trading on March 3rd, 2009 by Fast Brokers News – Comments Off

Gold Daily Commentary for 3.3.09

Gold continued its decline on Monday despite crashing U.S. equities.  Gold dropped below all of our supports and tripped beneath our 1st tier uptrend line.  Therefore, if Gold does not rise back above the uptrend line very soon, we could see a heightened sell-off in the near-term.  Although the fundamentals are turning negative for the time being, the medium-term uptrend is not lost.  There are multiple layers of uptrend the precious metal must fall below before we can call the uptrend dead.  While investors may be taking profits after impressive gains, if U.S. equities should continue their demise, we have no reason the negative correlation between the two won’t lock in.  Fundamentally, we find resistances of $930.76, $937.81/oz, $945.57/oz and $953.15/oz.  To the downside, we see supports of $919.22/oz, $911.60/oz, $903.29/oz., and $894.29/oz.  The $900/oz area should serve as a reliable psychological cushion in the near-term.  Gold is currently trading at $925.05/oz.

Corn Daily Commentary for 3.3.09

Corn futures recovered a bit yesterday despite the steep selloff in the S&P futures.  However, the corn futures are still below our near-term downtrend line and all three uptrend lines.  Therefore, we maintain our negative stance on corn.  If corn should fall beneath February lows, then we anticipate a large selloff with a possible retest of December lows.  Corn futures are following the path of U.S. equities.  With Prelim GDP coming in well below expectations, investors are anticipating the demand side of the equation to diminish further.  As the U.S. economy grinds to a halt, food consumption should decline.  Additionally, lower demand for meat in effect reduces the demand for corn used in livestock feed.  Furthermore, with U.S. citizens driving less and crude prices at a bargain, the demand for ethanol based fuel is waning.  Hence, if the S&P futures should continue their selloff as we anticipate, corn futures should flex their positive correlation and follow suit.  Fundamentally, see resistance at $3.4525/bshl, with 2nd tier and top-end resistances hanging at $3.51/bshl and $3.56/bshl, respectively.  To the downside, we find support $3.415/bshl with additional supports resting at $3.365/bshl, $3.3325/bshl, and $3.2825/bshl.  The $3.50/bshl area becomes a psychological barrier again with a psychological cushion at $3/bshl.  Corn futures are currently trading at $3.4525/bshl.

Crude Daily Commentary for 3.3.09

Crude futures crashed on Monday, following U.S. equities into the dumps.  Valuations in the stock market have investors worried about the U.S. and global economy as a whole for obvious reasons.  Therefore, investors ignored the OPEC supply constraints and sent crude tumbling.  However, Crude futures are recovering above the psychological $40/bbl area on Tuesday, and are now lodged solidly between our 1st and 2nd tier downtrend lines.  Our uptrend and 2nd tier downtrend line experienced an inflection point yesterday with a highly negative result.  Therefore, the futures could be sending a message that the downtrend is far from over.  Fortunately for the bulls, the Crude futures still have February lows as a base, so potential losses should be limited in the near term.  We expect a near-term rise in Crude futures today with a possible retest of our 2nd tier downtrend line.  Fundamentally, we find supports of $40.08/bbl, $39.42/bbl, $38.87/bbl, and $38.08/bbl.  The $40/bbl area remains a reliable psychological cushion for the near-term.  To the topside, we see resistances of $40.73/bbl, $41.26/bbl and $41.75/bbl, and $42.22/bbl.  Meanwhile, the $45/bbl area will serve as a psychological barrier.  Crude futures are currently trading at $40.61/bbl.

Top Day Recommendations

Posted in Commodity News Updates, Futures, commodities, commodity, top day recommendations, trading on January 22nd, 2009 by Current News – Comments Off

1.22.09

Today is the only day of economic releases this week. Crude inventories out at 10:35, delayed for a day due to MLK day Monday. Apple comes in with better earnings and this popped the Nasdaq against other index futures this morning. Crude was coming off overnight highs as it trades towards an expected increase in weekly supplies. The spreads in crude mentioned below  collapsed back towards “normalcy” yesterday due to the weight of their own success. Eco releases weren’t so great this morning with Housing Starts down 15% and initial claims up 62K to 589K.

Current views, speculations and suggestions

Mar Yen: positive with support at 110.50
Mar Swiss: neg with res at 87.50
Mar EC:  neg with res at 130.75
Mar Canadian: neg with res at 79.86
Mar BP:  now points to 135.00
Mar ES: positive with support at 812.00
Mar NQ: neg with res at 1213.00
Mar Russell: pos with support at 465.00
Mar Mini Dow: neg with res at 8286
Mar Silver: positive with support at 11.07
Feb gold:  neg with res at 862
Mar crude:  neg with res at 45.70

Longer term spread idea: from 12.22 we are long April crude at 44.90 and short Dec crude at 52.50 for a differential of 7.60.  On 1.07 could have bought April at 52.10 and sold Dec at 59.83 for 7.73.  Collapsed towards us yesterday.

Mar Soybeans:  positive with support at 9.975
Mar Wheat: support at 5.58
Mar Ten Year: positive with support at 124.07

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International Markets

Mar Euro Bund: neg with res at 124.60
Mar Dax: neg with res at 4375
Mar NK: neg with res at 8226

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N.B.: if you initiate a trade using any of these numbers use a stop at least equivalent to 2 ½%. Repeat: use stops.  Don’t think about using stops. Use stops.

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Futures trading entails considerable risk and is not for everyone. An account can lose more than its initial investment. Stops are not necessarily filled at the stop level. Past performance is not a guarantee of future results.

The Trend Trader

Posted in Commodity News Updates, Futures, Market Analysis, commodities, commodity, currencies, energies, grains, interest rates, livestock, suggestions, trading, trend trader on January 21st, 2009 by Bob Hunt – Comments Off

The Trend Trader helps to identify the current trend status of your favorite markets. Each contract in the table is represented by a directional tendency for both the Minor and Major trends.  Two up arrows identify a Bullish Trend - two down arrows a Bearish Trend - one of each a Neutral Trend. The Trend Trader not only helps us to stay on the right side of market direction, but it also helps us avoid those markets without a trend. You can even use the grid as a spread matrix too - buying strength and selling weakness. Before you place your next trade, be sure to consult the Trend Trader.