Technical Levels
SUPPORT 1 | SUPPORT 2 | RESISTANCE 1 | RESISTANCE 2 | |
GOLD | 1261 | 1253 | 1279 | 1291 |
SILVER | 20.28 | 20.12 | 20.01 | 21.17 |
COPPER | 3.1338 | 3.1081 | 3.2038 | 3.2738 |
CRUDE | 93.02 | 92.17 | 94.63 | 95.39 |
Commodity Contract S3 S2 S1 R1 R2 R3
SILVER
Silver edged higher overnight to open
at the day’s high of 20.78/20.83. It traded within range for most
of the session before declining to a four-week low of 20.40/20.45
later in the afternoon prior to concluding the day at 20.45/20.50.
Silver closed lower today at 20.50, the
5th lower close in a row. Intraday, we breached the 20.49 low from
October 15. The move opens up a retracement to 19.16, the low from
August 2013. We are bearish silver so long as it is trading below
resistance in the low 21’s.
The gold-silver ratio has shot higher
in the past two sessions, currently trading at 61.84. Gold typically
outperforms silver in a bear market. Resistance is at the most
recent major high at 62.37. There is support from the daily uptrend,
which currently comes in at 59.18.
Silver rose as weakness in rupee
supported amid growing speculation the U.S. was moving closer to
taking military action against Syria’s government.
An early end to stimulus could hurt
precious metals by drawing investors away from non-interest-bearing
assets.
Holdings at ishares silver trust gained
by 44.99 tonnes to 10600.69 tonnes from 10555.70 tonnes.
GOLD
Gold moved higher overnight to open at
1276.50/1277.50. It immediately rose to a high of 1280.00/1281.00 as
the dollar dropped and 10-year U.S. yields fell following mixed
signals on the timing of tapering of the monetary stimulus program.
The metal traded within range for most of the day before edging
lower to close at the session low of 1268.50/1269.50.
Gold closed higher today at 1269. The
risk is still for a full retracement back to the October low in the
1252 area. A breach of support at 1252 would open up the June low of
1180. We are bearish gold so long as it is trading below 1307.
Gold climbed to the Life time High as
Rupee dropped and political tension over Syria increased demand for
the precious metal as a store of value.
Western powers told the Syrian
opposition to expect a strike against Syria President Bashar
al-Assad’s forces within days.
SPDR Gold Trust, the world’s largest
gold-backed ETF, said its holdings rose 0.10 percent, or 0.90 tonnes,
to 921.03 tonne.
COPPER
On the Comex division of the New YorkMercantile Exchange, copper futures for December delivery traded at
USD3.191 a pound during European morning trade, down 1.35%.
Comex copper prices fell to a session low of USD3.186 a pound earlier, the weakest level since August 8.
The December contract settled 0.78% lower on Tuesday to end at USD3.234 a pound.
Comex copper prices fell to a session low of USD3.186 a pound earlier, the weakest level since August 8.
The December contract settled 0.78% lower on Tuesday to end at USD3.234 a pound.
Copper prices were
likely to find support at USD3.174 a pound, the low from August 8 and
resistance at USD3.258 a pound, the high from November 12.
Copper futures tumbled to the lowest
level since August on Wednesday, after a top-level Communist Party
meeting disappointed investors and amid growing speculation the
Federal Reserve will begin tapering its asset purchase program at its
December policy meeting.
Copper crossed 500 mark as support seen
due to weakness in rupee while a potential western strike on Syria
made investor bets more cautious.
The economy of China is showing clear
signs of stabilisation, helped by policy support and some improvement
in global demand.
In the US, recent data on durable
goods, single family home sales and business spending on capital
goods have been disappointing.
CRUDE
On the New York Mercantile Exchange,
light sweet crude futures for delivery in December traded at
USD93.71, down 0.19%, in a range of 93.45 - 93.78.
Some traders expect that more refiners than estimated have curbed their crude processing amid seasonal maintenance work and that could bring in the data more bearish than forecast. The American Petroleum Institute, an industry group, overnight said crude oil stocks rose 600,000 barrels in the week.
Some traders expect that more refiners than estimated have curbed their crude processing amid seasonal maintenance work and that could bring in the data more bearish than forecast. The American Petroleum Institute, an industry group, overnight said crude oil stocks rose 600,000 barrels in the week.
Crude oil prices weakened in Asia on
Thursday as some doubt is cast ahead of a weekly stocks report later
in the day from the U.S. Energy Information Administration that is
expected to show a drop in stocks to 994 million barrels from 1.577
billion.
Crude oil gained as tensions mounted in
Syria, heightening geopolitical and crude oil supply risk in the
Middle East.
Crude oil prices were also boosted as
protesters stopped production at oil fields in Western Libya.
U.S. crude stocks rose last week while
gasoline inventories declined and distillate stocks increased, API
data showed.
Global Economic Data
TIME | DATA | PRV | EXP | IMPACT |
7.00 P.M | Trade Balance | -38.8B | -38.7B | STRONG |
7.00 P.M | Unemployment Claims | 336K | 331K | STRONG |
8.30 P.M | Fed Chairperson-Designate Yellen Testifies | STRONG | ||
8.30 P.M | Crude Oil Inventories | 1.6M | 0.7M | MEDIUM |
Trade Balance
FF Alert | Release date delayed by 9 days due to the US government shutdown; |
Source | Bureau of Economic Analysis (latest release) |
Measures | Difference in value between imported and exported goods and services during the reported month; |
Usual Effect | Actual > Forecast = Good for currency; |
Frequency | Released monthly, about 35 days after the month ends; |
Next Release | Dec 4, 2013 |
FF Notes | A positive number indicates that more goods and services were exported than imported; |
Why Traders Care |
Export demand and currency demand are directly linked because foreigners must buy the domestic currency to pay for the nation's exports. Export demand also impacts production and prices at domestic manufacturers; |
Also Called | International Trade; |
Unemployment Claims
Source | Department of Labor (latest release) |
Measures | The number of individuals who filed for unemployment insurance for the first time during the past week; |
Usual Effect | Actual < Forecast = Good for currency; |
Frequency | Released weekly, 5 days after the week ends; |
Next Release | Nov 21, 2013 |
FF Notes | This is the nation's earliest economic data. The market impact fluctuates from week to week - there tends to be more focus on the release when traders need to diagnose recent developments, or when the reading is at extremes; |
Why Traders Care |
Although it's generally viewed as a lagging indicator, the number of unemployed people is an important signal of overall economic health because consumer spending is highly correlated with labor-market conditions. Unemployment is also a major consideration for those steering the country's monetary policy; |
Also Called | Jobless Claims, Initial Claims; |
Fed Chairperson-Designate Yellen
Testifies
FF Alert | Text of the testimony was unexpectedly released 17 hours earlier than the speaking time listed; |
Description | Due to testify on monetary policy before the Senate Banking Committee, in Washington DC; |
Source | Federal Reserve (latest release) |
Speaker | Federal Reserve Chairperson-Designate Janet Yellen; |
Usual Effect | More hawkish than expected = Good for currency; |
FF Notes | The testimony usually comes in 2 parts: first she reads a prepared statement (a text version is made available on the Fed's website at the start), then the committee will hold a question and answer session. Since the questions are not known beforehand they can make for some unscripted moments that lead to heavy market volatility; |
Why Traders Care |
As the Chairperson-Designate of the central bank, volatility will likely be experienced during her speeches as traders attempt to predict her affect on the bank's monetary policy; |
Acro Expand | Federal Reserve (Fed); |
Source | Energy Information Administration (latest release) |
Measures | Change in the number of barrels of crude oil held in inventory by commercial firms during the past week; |
Usual Effect | No consistent effect - there are both inflationary and growth implications; |
Frequency | Released weekly, 4 days after the week ends; |
Next Release | Nov 20, 2013 |
FF Notes | While this is a US indicator, it most affects the loonie due to Canada's sizable energy sector; |
Why Traders Care |
It influences the price of petroleum products which affects inflation, but also impacts growth as many industries rely on oil to produce goods; |
Also Called | Crude Stocks, Crude Levels; |
Acro Expand | Energy Information Administration (EIA); |
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