Directional Bias For The Day:
S&P Futures are higher;- The odds are for a down to sideways day from pre-open levels; elevated volatility – watch for break above 2680.50 for change of fortune
- Key economic data due:
- FOMC Meeting Minutes
Directional Bias Before Open:
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Key Levels:
- Critical support levels for S&P 500 are 2657.67, 2634.05 and 2620.52
- Critical resistance levels for S&P 500 are 2701.88, 2711.20 and 2746.03
- Key levels for eMini futures: break above 2680.50, the high of 1:30 AM and break below 2627.25, the low of 2:00 AM
Pre-Open
- On Tuesday at 4:00 PM, S&P future (June 2020) closed at 2649.75 and the index closed at 2659.41 – a spread of about -9.75 points; futures closed at 2642.00 for the day; the fair value is +7.75
- Pre-NYSE session open, futures are higher – at 8:00 AM, S&P 500 futures were up by +20.50; Dow by +198 and NASDAQ by +77.00
Markets Around The World
- Markets in the East closed mostly lower – Tokyo was up
- European markets are lower
- Currencies:
Up Down - Dollar index
- GBP/USD
- USD/JPY
- USD/CHF
- AUD/USD
- NZD/USD
- USD/CAD
- INR/USD
- EUR/USD
- Commodities:
Up Down - Crude Oil
- NatGas
- Gold
- Palladium
- Sugar (Unch.)
- Cotton
- Silver
- Copper
- Platinum
- Coffee
- Cocoa
- Bond
- 10-yrs yield closed at 0.736%, up from April 6 close of 0.676%;
- 30-years is at 1.332%, up from 1.284%
- 2-years yield is at 0.268% unchanged
- The 10-Year-&-2-Year spread is at 0.468 up from 0.408
- VIX
- Is at 46.27 down -0.43 from April 7 close; below 5-day SMA;
- Down from all time high of 85.47 on March 18
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
Indices gapped up at the open and then started to trade down. A brief rally early fizzled out and the down move started in earnest in late morning session. Most indices made relatively large red candle and gave up significant gains of the opening gap. Previously reversal from such high levels occurred during 2008 crisis.
Five S&P sectors – Consumer Staples, Industrials, Technology, Utility and Healthcare – closed lower. Real Estate was unchanged and other six closed higher.
From Briefing.com:
The major averages ended Tuesday with modest losses after surrendering their opening gains. The S&P 500 (-0.2%) slipped four points after starting the day with a 93-point gain while the Nasdaq (-0.3%) underperformed slightly.
[…]Six out of eleven sectors ended the day with gains ranging from 0.1% (real estate) to 2.4% (materials) while the top-weighted technology sector (-1.1%) underperformed from the start.
[…]On the flip side, materials (+2.4%) and energy (+2.0%) outperformed throughout the day. The energy sector was able to remain in the green, even though crude oil slumped into the pit close, ending lower by 9.3% at $23.78/bbl.
[…]Treasuries retreated during the first half of the session but narrowed their losses as the day went on. The 10-yr yield ended higher by six basis points at 0.74%.
[…]
The U.S. Dollar Index fell 0.8% to 99.88, returning to levels from Thursday.• The NFIB Small Business Optimism Index fell to 96.4 in March from 104.5 in February
• Job openings decreased to 6.882 mln in February from a revised 7.012 mln (from 6.963 mln) in January
• Consumer credit expanded by $22.30 bln in February (Briefing.com consensus $14.00 bln) after increasing by a revised $12.10 bln (from $12.00 bln) in January.