Directional Bias For The Day:
S&P Futures are lower; mostly moving down since 2:00 PM on Tuesday; fresh leg down since 2:30 PM on Wednesday- The odds are for a down day with elevated volatility – watch for break above 2841.00 for change of fortune
- Trade news influencing the sentiments; risk-off sentiments
- Key economic data due:
- Unemployment Claims (211K vs. 215K est.; prev. 212K) at 8:30 AM
- Flash Manufacturing PMI (est. 53.;; prev. 53.0) at 9:45 AM
- Flash Services PMI (est. 53.6; prev. 53.0) at 9:45 AM
- New Home Sales ( est. 678K; prev. 692K) at 10:00 AM
Markets Around The World
- Markets in the East closed lower
- European markets are lower
- Currencies:
Up Down - Dollar index
- USD/CAD
- USD/INR
- EUR/USD
- GBP/USD
- USD/JPY
- USD/CHF
- AUD/USD
- NZD/USD
- Commodities:
Up Down - NatGas
- Gold
- Silver
- Palladium
- Cotton
- Crude Oil
- Copper
- Platinum
- Sugar
- Coffee
- Cocoa
- Bonds
- 10-yrs yield is at 2.361%, down from May 21 close of 2.393%;
- 30-years is at 2.785%, down from 2.818%
- 2-years yield is at 2.192%, down from 2.225%
- The 10-Year-&-2-Year spread is at 0.169, up from 0.168
Key Levels:
- Critical support levels for S&P 500 are 2831.29, 2820.08 and 2815.08
- Critical resistance levels for S&P 500 are 2851.11, 286318 and 2868.69
- Key levels for eMini futures: break above 2841.00, the high of 3:30 AM and break below 2825.25, the low of 6:00 AM
Pre-Open
- On Wednesday, at 4:00 PM, S&P future (June contract) closed at 2857.50 and the index closed at 2856.27 – a spread of about +1.25 points; futures closed at 2857.50 for the day; the fair value is +0.00
- Pre-NYSE session open, futures are lower – at 8:45 AM, S&P 500 futures were down by -23.25; Dow by -230 and NASDAQ by -82.75
Directional Bias Before Open
- Weekly: Uptrend
- Daily: Uptrend under pressure
- 120-Min: Side-Down
- 30-Min: Down
- 15-Min: Down
- 6-Min: Down
The trend and patterns on various time frames for S&P 500:
Monthly |
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Weekly: |
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Daily |
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2-Hour (e-mini future) |
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30-Minute (e-mini future) |
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15-Minute (e-mini future) |
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Previous Session
From Briefing.com:
The stock market wavered with modest losses on Wednesday, leaving the S&P 500 down 0.3%, amid persisting trade uncertainty. The prevalence, and volatile nature, of trade headlines that have no clear end-date helped curb some of yesterday’s trade-related enthusiasm.
The Dow Jones Industrial Average lost 0.4%, the Nasdaq Composite lost 0.5%, and the Russell 2000 lost 0.9%.
Reports that the U.S. is considering blacklisting several other Chinese firms put a damper on Apple (AAPL 182.78, -3.82, -2.1%) and many of the stocks within the Philadelphia Semiconductor Index (-2.1%).
[…]All of the S&P 500 cyclical sectors finished lower. The energy sector (-1.6%) led the decline amid lower oil prices ($61.40/bbl, -$1.67, -2.6%), which were pressured by the trade uncertainty and some bearish inventory data.
This uncertainty also fostered some defensive positioning in U.S. Treasuries and in the S&P 500 utilities (+0.8%), health care (+0.6%), consumer staples (+0.6%) and real estate (+0.4%) sectors.
The 2-yr yield declined two basis points to 2.22%, and the 10-yr yield declined three basis points to 2.39%. The U.S. Dollar Index finished little changed at 98.09.
[…]• The Minutes from the May FOMC meeting showed that policymakers are comfortable with the current fed funds rate range while “a number of participants” saw a moderation in risk and uncertainties surrounding their outlooks for the year.
o The key takeaway is that the stock market has a reasonable assurance to think policy rates are going to remain quite low on a real and nominal basis. Low rates are supportive for risk assets like stocks.