Directional Bias For The Day:
S&P Futures are lower;- The odds are for a sideways to down day; watch for a break above 3841.75 and below 3822.25 for clarity
- No key economic data report due during the day:
Directional Bias Before Open:
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Key Levels:
- Critical support levels for S&P 500 are 3841.15, 3830.41, and 3816.22, and 3804.53
- Critical resistance levels for S&P 500 are 3852.31, 3861.22, and 3863.30
- Key levels for E-mini futures: break above 3841.75, the high of 8:15 AM and break below 3830.00, the low of 4:30 PM on Friday
Pre-Open
- On Friday at 4:00 PM, S&P futures (March 2021) closed at 3832.75 and the index closed at 3841.47 – a spread of about -8.75 points; futures closed at 3834.25 for the day; the fair value is -1.50
- Pre-NYSE session open, futures are mixed – at 8:15 AM, S&P 500 futures were up by +5.50; Dow down by -125, and NASDAQ up by +133.25
Markets Around The World
- Markets in the East closed mostly higher – Mumbai and Singapore closed down
- European markets are mostly lower – Switzerland is up
- Currencies (from two weeks ago):
Up Down - EUR/USD
- GBP/USD
- AUD/USD
- NZD/USD
- USD/CAD
- Dollar index
- USD/JPY
- USD/CHF
- INR/USD
- Commodities (from two weeks ago):
- Energy futures are lower
- Precious metals are higher
- Industrial metals are mostly higher
- Most soft commodities are mixed
- Treasuries (from two weeks ago)
- 10-years yield closed at 1.091%, down 1.4 BP from two weeks ago;
- 30-years is at 1.857%, down 0.6 BP;
- 2-years yield is at 0.125%, down 1.2 BP;
- The 10-Year-&-2-Year spread is at 0.966, down from 0.968
- VIX
- At 23.41 @ 7:45 AM; up from the last close; above 5-day SMA;
- Recent high = 29.19 on January 4; low = 20.99 on December 29
- Sentiment: Risk-On-Neutral
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 futures) |
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30-Minute (E-mini futures) |
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15-Minute (E-mini futures) |
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Previous Session
For the week, most major indices closed higher in lower volume. Dow Jones Transportation Average closed down. Asai was mostly higher and Europe was mixed. The dollar index was down, energy futures were down too but precious metals and most industrial metals were up. Soft commodities were mixed and the US Treasury yields were mixed too.
From Briefing.com:
The Nasdaq Composite (+0.1%) eked out another closing record high on Friday, overcoming a negative start and capping off a strong week for the tech-sensitive index. The Russell 2000 rallied 1.3% and closed at a record high in a steady advance off opening lows, while the S&P 500 (-0.3%) and Dow Jones Industrial Average (-0.6%) closed lower. […] These headlines stirred lingering growth concerns, which were manifested in the underperformance of the S&P 500 financials (-0.7%), industrials (-0.5%), and energy (-0.5%) sectors. Oil prices ($52.33/bbl, -0.79, -1.5%) also softened up, and the growth-sensitive 10-yr Treasury note yield decreased two basis points to 1.09% amid an uptick in demand.
Most sectors gradually pared losses throughout the day, while the counter-cyclical real estate (+0.3%), utilities (+0.2%), and communication services (+0.1%) sectors finished with modest gains.
[…]The 2-yr yield was unchanged at 0.12%. The U.S. Dollar Index increased 0.1% to 90.23.
[…][…]
- Existing home sales increased 0.7% m/m in December to a seasonally adjusted annual rate of 6.76 million (Briefing.com consensus 6.50 million).
- […]
- The January IHS flash Markit Manufacturing PMI checked in at 59.1 versus 57.1 in December; the January flash Services PMI checked in at 57.5 versus 54.8 in December.
- Russell 2000 +9.8% YTD
- Nasdaq Composite +5.1% YTD
- S&P 500 +2.3% YTD
- Dow Jones Industrial Average +1.3% YTD