Directional Bias For The Day:
S&P Futures are lower;- The odds are for down day; watch for a break above 3804.50 for change of fortune
- No key economic data report due during the day
Directional Bias Before Open:
|
|
Key Levels:
- Critical support levels for S&P 500 are 3783.60, 3764.71, and 3742.39
- Critical resistance levels for S&P 500 are 3800.96, 3812.99, and 3826.69
- Key levels for E-mini futures: break above 3804.50, the high of 3:00 AM and break below 3775.00, the low of 1:30 PM on Friday
Pre-Open
- On Friday at 4:00 PM, S&P futures (March 2021) closed at 3817.00 and the index closed at 3824.68 – a spread of about -7.75 points; futures closed at 3817.50 for the day; the fair value is -0.50
- Pre-NYSE session open, futures are lower – at 8:00 AM, S&P 500 futures were down by -26.00; Dow up by -244, and NASDAQ by -78.75
Markets Around The World
- Markets in the East closed mostly lower – Hong Kong and Mumbai were up; Tokyo was closed
- European markets are mostly lower – Switzerland is up
- Currencies (from two weeks ago):
Up Down - EUR/USD
- GBP/USD
- USD/JPY
- AUD/USD
- NZD/USD
- Dollar index
- USD/CHF
- USD/CAD
- INR/USD
- Commodities (from two weeks ago):
- Energy futures are higher
- Precious metals are lower
- Industrial metals are mostly lower
- Most soft commodities are mixed
- Treasuries (from two weeks ago)
- 10-years yield closed at 1.117%, up 19.1 BP from two weeks ago;
- 30-years is at 1.871%, up 20.9 BP;
- 2-years yield is at 0.137%, up 1.6 BP;
- The 10-Year-&-2-Year spread is at 0.980, up from 0.805
- VIX
- At 23.56 @ 8:00 AM; up from the last close; at/below 5-day SMA;
- Recent high = 29.19 on January 4; low = 20.99 on December 29
- Sentiment: Risk-Off
The trend and patterns on various time frames for S&P 500:
Monthly |
|
Weekly: |
|
Daily |
|
2-Hour (E-mini futures) |
|
30-Minute (E-mini futures) |
|
15-Minute (E-mini futures) |
|
Previous Session
For the week, major indices closed higher in higher volume. Europe and Asia also closed higher. The dollar index closed up. The crude oil also closed up and gold closed down. The US Treasury yields were up for the week.
From Briefing.com:
The S&P 500 (+0.6%), Nasdaq Composite (+1.0%), and Dow Jones Industrial Average (+0.2%) closed at fresh record highs on Friday despite a weak December employment report. The Russell 2000 (-0.3%) set an intraday all-time high at the open but closed lower. […[ In the stock market, the S&P 500 consumer discretionary (+1.8%), real estate (+1.1%), information technology (+0.8%), and utilities (+0.9%) sectors carried the market higher,
[…]On the downside, the materials (-0.5%), financials (-0.2%), industrials (-0.2%), and energy (-0.1%) sectors finished in the red.
[…]Longer-dated Treasuries continued to face selling pressure amid expectations for economic growth and possibly inflation. The 10-yr yield increased another three basis points to 1.11%, while the 2-yr yield decreased one basis point to 0.13%. The U.S. Dollar Index increased 0.3% to 90.06. WTI crude futures increased 2.8%, or $1.44, to $52.25/bbl.
[…][…]
- The December employment report disappointed on the headline level as nonfarm payrolls declined by 140,000 (Briefing.com consensus 112,000) against expectations for an increase. However, the drop was partially offset by a large upward revision to November figures and an increase in December average hourly earnings. December private sector payrolls decreased by 95,000 (Briefing.com consensus 100,000). December unemployment rate was unchanged at 6.7% (Briefing.com consensus 6.7%)
- […]
- Consumer credit increased by $15.3 bln in November after increasing a revised $4.5 bln (from $7.2 bln) in October.
- […]
- Wholesale inventories were unchanged in November (Briefing.com consensus -0.1%) following an upwardly revised 1.3% increase (from +1.1%) in October.
- Russell 2000 +5.9% YTD
- Nasdaq Composite +2.4% YTD
- S&P 500 +1.8% YTD
- Dow Jones Industrial Average +1.6% YTD