Directional Bias For The Day:
S&P Futures are higher; moving up since 5:00 AM on July 9- The odds are for an up to sideways day – watch for break below 3010.75 for change of fortune
- Key economic data due:
- Empire State Manufacturing Index ( 4.3 vs. 1.6; prev. -08.6) at 8:30 AM
Markets Around The World
- Markets in the East closed mixed – Shanghai, Hong Kong and Mumbai closed up; Tokyo, Sydney, Seoul and Singapore closed down
- European markets are higher
- Currencies:
-
Up Down - Dollar index
- USD/JPY
- AUD/USD
- NZD/USD
- EUR/USD
- GBP/USD
- USD/CHF
- USD/CAD
- USD/INR
- Commodities:
Up Down - Crude Oil
- Gold
- Silver
- Copper
- Platinum
- Palladium
- Cotton
- NatGas
- Sugar
- Coffee
- Cocoa
- Bonds
- 10-yrs yield is at 2.111%, up from July 12 close of 2.106%;
- 30-years is at 2.638%, up from 2.633%
- 2-years yield is at 1.845%, down from 1.857%
- The 10-Year-&-2-Year spread is at 0.266, up from 0.249
Key Levels:
- Critical support levels for S&P 500 are 3004.51, 2999.90 and 2988.80
- Critical resistance levels for S&P 500 are 3021.90, 3029.89 and 3030.65
- Key levels for eMini futures: break above 3023.50, the high of 3:30 AM and break below 3016.50, the low of 5:30 AM
Pre-Open
- On Friday, at 4:00 PM, S&P future (June contract) closed at 3017.00 and the index closed at 3013.77 – a spread of about +3.25 points; futures closed at 3015.50 for the day; the fair value is +1.50
- Pre-NYSE session open, futures are higher – at 8:30 AM, S&P 500 futures were up by +6.50; Dow by +51 and NASDAQ by +23.25
Directional Bias Before Open
- Weekly: Uptrend resumed
- Daily: Uptrend
- 120-Min:Up
- 30-Min: Up
- 15-Min: Up
- 6-Min: Up
The trend and patterns on various time frames for S&P 500:
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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 major averages ended the week at fresh record highs after a steady daylong push that was paced by the Dow Jones Industrial Average (+0.9%) while the Nasdaq (+0.6%) and S&P 500 (+0.5%) recorded slimmer gains. The small cap Russell 2000 (+0.8%) had a better showing than its large cap peers, but the index has another 10.0% to gain before revisiting its record from last year.
Today’s advance was supported by continued hope for a rate cut taking place as soon as July 31.
[…]Eight out of eleven sectors recorded gains on Friday, with cyclical groups faring better than the countercyclical side. Industrials (+1.8%) and consumer discretionary (+1.1%) spent the day atop the leaderboard to end the week with respective gains of 1.2% and 2.1%.
Industrials rallied alongside heavyweight Boeing (BA 365.33, +6.33, +1.8%) while transport stocks outperformed. The Dow Jones Transportation Average jumped 2.4% with trucking names leading the push. JB Hunt (JBHT 92.94, +5.18, +5.9%) and Ryder (R 57.53, +3.14, +5.8%) spiked near 6.0% apiece, even though peer, U.S. Xpress (USX 4.32, -0.53, -10.9%), warned that industry conditions have worsened.
[…]Treasuries started the day in the red, but a daylong rebound lifted all tenors into the green by the close. The 10-yr yield dipped one basis point to 2.11%. The U.S. Dollar Index returned into the neighborhood of its 200-day moving average (96.77), sliding 0.3% to 96.81.
Today’s economic data was limited to June PPI:
• The index for final demand increased 0.1% m/m in June (Briefing.com consensus 0.0%), held back by a 3.1% drop in the index for final demand energy, while the index for final demand, excluding food and energy, rose 0.3% m/m (Briefing.com consensus +0.2%). Those readings left the index for final demand up 1.7% yr/yr, versus 1.8% yr/yr in May. That is the lowest 12-month change since January 2017. Core PPI, however, was up 2.3% yr/yr, which was unchanged from May.
o The key takeaway from the report is that Producer Price Index for June, like the Consumer Price Index for June, didn’t exactly support the case for a 50-basis points cut in July. Some might argue, too, that it didn’t event support the case for a 25-basis points cut in July, yet that’s almost a moot (and mute) argument given the subtext of Mr. Powell’s remarks in his semiannual monetary policy testimony.