Support & Resistance Levels

This Blog provides futures market outlook for different commodities and futures trading markets, mostly stock index futures, as well as support and resistance levels for Crude Oil futures, Gold futures, Euro currency and others. At times the daily trading blog will include educational information about different aspects of commodity and futures trading.

Labor Day Futures Trading Schedule 2013

Labor Day Holiday Schedule for CME / Globex

and ICE Futures U.S. Exchanges

 

All times listed as Central Time

CME / Globex

Þ  CME & CBOT Equity Products

Friday, Aug. 30

  • 4:15 CT – Regular close

Sunday, Sep. 1

  • 5:00 CT – Regular open for trade date Tuesday, Sept. 3*

Monday, Sept. 2

  • 7:15 CT – Regular close

Tuesday, Sept. 3

  • 4:15 CT – Regular close

Þ  CME & CBOT Interest Rate & FX Products

Friday, Aug. 30

  • 3:15 CT – Early close

Sunday, Sept. 1

  • 5:00 CT – Regular open for trade date Tuesday, Sep 3*

Monday, Sept. 2

  • 12:00 CT – Trading halt – Order entry, modification and cancellation allowed
  • 5:00 CT – Halted products resume trading

Tuesday, Sept. 3

  • 4:00 CT – Regular close

Þ  NYMEX, COMEX®Products

Friday, Aug. 30

  • 4:15 CT / 5:15 ET – Regular close

Sunday, Sept. 1

  • 15:00 CT / 6:00 ET – Regular open for trade date Tuesday, Sep 3*

Monday, Sept. 2

  • 12:15 CT / 1:15 ET – Trading halt (order entry, modification and cancellation allowed)
  • 5:00 CT / 6:00 ET – Halted products resume trading

Tuesday, Sept. 3

  • 4:15 CT / 5:15 ET – Regular close

More details at: http://www.cmegroup.com/tools-information/holiday-calendar/files/2013-memorial-day.pdf

Þ  CBOT, KCBT, Minneapolis Grain Exchange Grain & Agricultural Products

Friday, Aug. 30

  • Regular close – Per each product schedule

Note: Grain pre-opening between 2:30 CT – 4:00 CT

Sunday, Sept. 1

  • 4:00 CT – Grain markets pre–opening for trade date Tuesday, Sep 3*

Monday, Sept. 2

  • 7:00 CT – Grain markets open for trade date Tuesday, Sep 3

Þ  Other CME Group Products on CME Globex: Agricultural, Weather, Real Estate

Friday, Aug. 30

  • Regular Close – Per each product schedule for:
    • Livestock • Dow Jones UBS ER
    • Weather • Real Estate
    • Lumber • Dairy

Sunday, Sept. 1

  • 5:00 CT – Regular open for trade date Tuesday, Sep 3*
    • Exceptions:
    • Lumber will remain closed until its scheduled opening of 9:00 CT on Tuesday
    • Livestock will remain closed until its scheduled opening 9:05 CT on Tuesday

Tuesday, Sept. 3

  • Regular Close – Per each product schedule

ICE Futures US

Þ  ICE Softs, Cash-Settled Grains

 

Friday, Aug. 30

  • Regular hours

Sunday, Sept. 1

  • Closed

Monday, Sept. 2

  • Closed

Tuesday, Sept. 3

  • Regular open

 

Þ  ICE USDX Index

 

Friday, Aug. 30

  • 3:15 CT – Early close

Sunday, Sept. 1

  • Closed

Monday, Sept. 2

  • 12:00 CT Early close

Þ  ICE Russell Index

 

Friday, Aug. 30

  • 4:15 CT – Early close

Sunday, Sept. 1

  • Closed

Monday, Sept. 2

  • 10:30 CT Early close

Tuesday, Sept. 3

  • Regular open 

 

More details at: https://www.theice.com/marketdata/Calendar.shtml?calendars=Holiday&expirationEnabled=false&calendars=SpecialTradingHours

The above sources were compiled from sources believed to be reliable.  Cannon Trading assumes no responsibility for any errors or omissions.  It is meant as an alert to events that may affect trading strategies and is not necessarily complete.  The closing times for certain contracts may have been rescheduled.

Futures Trading Levels and Economic Reports for August 29, 2013

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1. Market Commentary
2. Futures Support and Resistance Levels – S&P, Nasdaq, Dow Jones, Russell 2000, Dollar Index
3. Commodities Support and Resistance Levels – Gold, Euro, Crude Oil, T-Bonds
4. Commodities Support and Resistance Levels – Corn, Wheat, Beans, Silver
5. Futures Economic Reports for Thursday August 29, 2013

Hello Traders,

For 2013 I would like to wish all of you discipline and patience in your trading! 

 

The mental part of trading is so hard….

 

Today for example I had excellent signals on the crude oil yet barely managed to scratch…

 

It started with me trying to trade while doing other things (not a good idea…)

Then I would miss a good trade and get anxious to jump in even though the signal was done with…also not a good thing.

 

Once I did get in, since my psyche was already off, I did not have the patience to stay in the trade and let my stops and targets work, so I would get out. Sure enough seconds after I get out, the market goes my way and drives me crazy…not a good thing again….Luckily the signals were good enough otherwise this could have been a bad day.

 

The points I am trying to make today?

Make sure you are focused and not distracted.

If you sense that you are not in the right frame of mind, take a small break.

Plan your trade and then have patience to trade your plan.

I highly recommend using daily stops and profit targets. Set a profit target for the day and when achieved take your profit and walk away. Set a daily loss limit, i.e the most you are willing to risk on any given day. When that happens, walk away. Might be a losing day but if you stop it can not turn into a TERRIBLE day….

 

I wrote a full article about my day trading money management approach for SFO magazine few years back. If you like a copy, please email me and I will send you the PDF.

 

If you are a client, simply include your account number.

If you are a prospect, please answer the following:

 

 

1. Have you traded futures before?

2. What markets interest you at this time?

3. Are you planning to daytrade, longer term trades? options/futures?

4. What is the amount of capital you are planning to open an account with or working with currently?

5. Have you taken a course or been mentored by anyone?

6. Do you currently have your own charts that you are using?

 

 

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Futures Trading Levels and Economic Reports for August 27, 2013

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1. Market Commentary
2. Futures Support and Resistance Levels – S&P, Nasdaq, Dow Jones, Russell 2000, Dollar Index
3. Commodities Support and Resistance Levels – Gold, Euro, Crude Oil, T-Bonds
4. Commodities Support and Resistance Levels – Corn, Wheat, Beans, Silver
5. Futures Economic Reports for Tuesday August 27, 2013

Hello Traders,

For 2013 I would like to wish all of you discipline and patience in your trading! 

 

 

Situation in Syria is heating up and over the next few days/ weeks you may see some erratic moves in markets like SP 500 ( and other indices), gold, crude oil, bonds and others.
I personally always like to use stops and actually have my software checked with auto bracket each time I enter a daytrade. I like to have a stop entered right away and then be able to adjust according to the charts. Moves like we saw today ( see mini SP chart below) can happen frequently in times of Geo-political uncertainty. The SP500 dropped over 13 points in matter of 11 minutes. I actually seen much bigger and faster moves happen before but my main point here is that I recommend using stops and placing stop orders rather than using “mental stop”.
If you need help on how to set up the auto bracket on either E-futures Int’l orTransactAT, feel free to email me and I will be happy to assist.
7 tick range bar chart, mini S&P

 

 

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Futures Trading Levels and Economic Reports for August 23, 2013

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1. Market Commentary
2. Futures Support and Resistance Levels – S&P, Nasdaq, Dow Jones, Russell 2000, Dollar Index
3. Commodities Support and Resistance Levels – Gold, Euro, Crude Oil, T-Bonds
4. Commodities Support and Resistance Levels – Corn, Wheat, Beans, Silver
5. Futures Economic Reports for Friday August 23, 2013

Hello Traders,

For 2013 I would like to wish all of you discipline and patience in your trading! 

 

 

Another big day in stock index futures. Push lower overnight and then a powerful rally the rest of the day session.

 

The big question of course is….is this a short covering rally or the start of another leg up?

 

No one has the answer but we can all speculate on different scenarios. Looking at both the SP500 ( mini) and the NASDAQ 100 ( mini ) charts below, I think the following need to happen in order for the markets to have continued momentum to the upside: Nasdaq has to break above 3115 and mini sp needs to break 1657.75 followed by 1562 . Even then the question is does one think these markets can make new highs or not?

 

Either way price action was bullish today, we took out yesterdays low and closed above yesterday’s high. I think it’s called outside day reversal but don’t quote me on that….

 

NASDAQ 100 is the stronger sector leading the way so far.

 

On the downside, I want to see SP 500 “entering the cloud” below 1640 and the NASDAQ going below 3064.

 

Lots of technical chatter today and bottom line is the way price action will be tomorrow..Hence futures trading (-:

 

Charts for your review below:

 

mini nasdaq 100 daily

 

 

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Futures Trading Levels and Economic Reports for August 22, 2013

Connect with Us! Use Our Futures Trading Levels and Economic Reports RSS Feed.

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1. Market Commentary
2. Futures Support and Resistance Levels – S&P, Nasdaq, Dow Jones, Russell 2000, Dollar Index
3. Commodities Support and Resistance Levels – Gold, Euro, Crude Oil, T-Bonds
4. Commodities Support and Resistance Levels – Corn, Wheat, Beans, Silver
5. Futures Economic Reports for Thursday August 22, 2013

Hello Traders,

For 2013 I would like to wish all of you discipline and patience in your trading! 

FOMC minutes came out and was actually better than advertised….This is the first time in a while where I felt we saw legitimate , free market action. The market had volatility, wide ranges and moved both ways on one of the better trading volumes in weeks.

 

Don’t get me wrong, I am not saying that every trading day should like this but we have witnessed over the past 3-4 years been a market guided by QE where traders and large institutions were just looking to buy the dips. I am sure that this will not be over in one day and it is a process but I have a feeling that this is a start of going back to “normal”, free market conditions. “normal”, free markets can and will have strong corrections and moves both up and down.

 

What does it mean to you the day-trader? Look back at intraday charts from 2007- 2009 and you will get an idea.

 

In between I am sharing a small  piece from a booklet I wrote where I outline some of my day-trading theories and techniques.

 

 

My opinion is that there are 3 main types of trading days.

 

    1. Most common is two sided trading action with swings up and down – this type of trading day is most suitable for the main aspect of this model, which is taking trades based on the arrows.
    2. Strong trending day, mostly one directional – this type of trading day is the least common, many times this will happen on Mondays and maybe 3-5 times a month at most – this type of trading day is most suitable for using the color scheme I have on the charts. Green bars mean strong up trend, red bars mean strong down trend. If you determined that this is a trend day, then use pull backs to enter with the direction of trend and use the parabolic (little dashes) as you trailing stop.
    3. Slow and/ or choppy trading day – this type of trading day is best suited for taking small profits from the market by either using the main model or taking the diamonds as entry signal, and going for quick profits and tight stops.

 

Assessing the Type of Trading Day

  • A good question is how can one assess what type of trading day we will have while the market is still trading? I am doing some work about it and will be happy to hear feedback via email, but here are some initial observations:

 

1)    Was the overnight session a wide, two sided trading range? If the answer is yes, good chances are for a similar trading day during the primary session (primary session is when the cash/ stock market is open).

2)    Mondays have the highest chance for trending days.

3)    The behavior of the first hour of trading can also suggests the type of action for the rest of the day.

4)    If the first 30 minutes have good volume, better chances for type 1 or type 2 trading days.

5)    Low volume during the first 30 minutes can suggest a choppy (type 3 trading day).

6)    Is there a big report today? monthly employment situation? FOMC statement? The major reports can create volatility in the market, so be aware of what reports are scheduled.

 

 

 

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Futures Trading Levels and Economic Reports for August 21, 2013

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1. Market Commentary
2. Futures Support and Resistance Levels – S&P, Nasdaq, Dow Jones, Russell 2000, Dollar Index
3. Commodities Support and Resistance Levels – Gold, Euro, Crude Oil, T-Bonds
4. Commodities Support and Resistance Levels – Corn, Wheat, Beans, Silver
5. Futures Economic Reports for Wednesday August 21, 2013

Hello Traders,

For 2013 I would like to wish all of you discipline and patience in your trading! 

 

FOMC minutes tomorrow should bring some additional volatility to the markets and in my opinion will either confirm another leg down or not.

 

In between, a little tip that I find useful and wanted to share with you:

 

 

It is a known fact that fear and greed can be one of your worst enemies.

 

One way I found that helped some clients to deal with the fear and greed and its related cousin, “getting out of winners too soon and staying in losers too long…” is entering multiple contracts when getting into a day-trade.

 

Obviously, one has to have the appropriate risk capital, margin requirements to do so but the advantage of trading more than one “unit” or splitting your trading size into two or more parts is as such:

 

If you enter a trade with one contract ( or if you are treating your trading size as one unit, meaning you enter a trade with 4 contracts and exit the trade with 4 contracts, that is considered treating your trading size as one unit), you can face a very quick dilemma, especially when day-trading. You get in and very quickly you are up 2 mini SP points….what do you do? Do you take profit? Bring your stop loss closer? How do you avoid getting out too early or too late?

On the flip side, you enter a trade and it goes against rather quickly…if you get out then it is a loser and what if the market goes back up says the little devil voice in our head….

In the good case scenario when market decided to be nice to us and is moving in our direction, what I like to do it is exit half of my position relatively quick. In the case of the mini SP , around 7 ticks profit. What I found out is that will allow me to manage the rest of the trade in a much more relaxed manner since I already “locked profits in” I can now look for a proper stop, close to my breakeven level. I can analyze my next target more realistically and hopefully if the market provides room for additional gains, be in there to participate.

The same can be applied to the stop loss part. I can choose to risk a smaller amount or a tight stop on the first half of my position and a bit wider stop on the other half of the position. That can help prevent the scenario when one does not get out of a trade because mentally he or she does not want to accept the loss….

 

 

Off course there is much more to trading and day-trading. Entry signals, exit techniques, why and when to get in a trade are key but I hope that this little tip will assist you while trading and will prevent some of the instances where you get out too late or too early…..

 

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Important Factors When Choosing a Futures Broker

Choosing a Futures Broker can be somewhat of a daunting task. Most popular factors I see considered: cost, customer service, experience and knowledge. Going through the process of one’s own due diligence of researching your broker’s firm, trying a futures platform and comparing costs is a process one must take to find a broker that fits him or her.

Being a broker myself, I hear many concerns about cost before I even here about the type of future trading platform one would like to be set up with that fit his or her trading style. Please note cost should not be all when choosing a futures broker. Most reasonable and competitive commission quotes, for example the mini S&P cost less than half a tick. Unless you are trading high volume, less than half a tick should not hurt your account balance per round turn. When you look for “deep discount” commodity brokers, these brokers may provide you with an appealing commission cost but they may lack quality service and or even knowledge of the futures/commodities markets. This happens countless times in the industry; where clients will sacrifice service and knowledge of a broker for fifty cents less in commission because a lower commission cost seems to be more important for a client. Please be aware commission costs are only one ingredient of choosing a broker when trading futures.

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Futures Trading Levels

A more important component, I believe to be than cost when choosing a futures broker is customer service. Always note how long it takes your broker to respond for example to an email you send him or her. Does your broker respond in a timely manner? If your request was urgent did he/she give you the attention that’s required to solve the issue? These are very important factors one must consider when choosing a broker. If you, the client, end up with a commodities broker who is non responsive and not willing to help when the time is needed, there will be no value in you having a broker.

Look for the added values your broker can provide to help increase your success in futures trading, such as experience and knowledge. In my opinion, a great futures broker wants their clients to be successful in futures trading. Never be afraid to use your broker to pick his or her brain about the futures markets you are trading; go over strategies that you are using but may not be working for you. You choose your broker for a reason and your broker’s job is to service your futures account; be able to help you with your trading platform and every so often give his or her opinion of the markets you are trading if it’s asked by the client. In many “deep discount” firms, brokers seem to lack this type of service. I have seen many times where the client is left to figure out the platform themselves and are trading blindly because they lack direction from a licensed broker.

Although I agree that cost is a large component when choosing a broker, always consider the other factors such as customer service, knowledge and experience. Because if a broker lacks those three qualities but can provide you only cost, you may see your account having a shorter life span in the futures markets.

SPECIAL NOTE: Trading Futures, Options on Futures, and retail off-exchange foreign currency transactions involves substantial risk of loss and is not suitable for all investors. You should carefully consider whether trading is suitable for you in light of your circumstances, knowledge, and financial resources. You may lose all or more of your initial investment. Opinions, market data, and recommendations are subject to change at any time.

Futures Trading Levels and Economic Report for August 20, 2013

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Like us on FacebookFollow us on TwitterView our profile on LinkedInFind us on Google+Cannon Trading Futures Trading Resistance & Support Levels and Economic ReportsFind us on Yelp

1. Market Commentary
2. Futures Support and Resistance Levels – S&P, Nasdaq, Dow Jones, Russell 2000, Dollar Index
3. Commodities Support and Resistance Levels – Gold, Euro, Crude Oil, T-Bonds
4. Commodities Support and Resistance Levels – Corn, Wheat, Beans, Silver
5. Futures Economic Reports for Tuesday August 20, 2013

Hello Traders,

For 2013 I would like to wish all of you discipline and patience in your trading! 

TradeTheNews.com Weekly Market Update: Rising Rates and Taper Fears Heighten Volatility

www.TradeTheNews.com– Volatility returned to markets this week after several weeks of subdued summer trading. The miss in the Japan preliminary Q2 GDP during Monday’s Asia session dampened sentiment on Monday, although better European Q2 GDP numbers and the solid July US retail sales data helped balance the picture. Then on Thursday, reports showed that initial claims for the week ending Aug 9th dropped to six-year lows and the July US CPI hit 2.0%, indicating continued progress towards the Fed’s targets. The combination of good jobs and inflation data provoked a big decline in equity indices and a sell-off in USTs as traders decided the data helped cement the case for Fed tapering in September. By Friday, the 10-year yield pushed out to two-year highs above 2.84% as the sell-off in bonds continued. Spot gold made eight-week highs around $1,370, and silver rose 14% for its biggest weekly gain in nearly five years. For the week the S&P500 dropped 2.1%, the Nasdaq gave up 1.6%, and the DJIA lost 2.2%, its worst weekly decline this year.- A return to growth in France and Germany helped pull the euro zone out of economic contraction in the second quarter. Euro zone Q2 GDP gained 0.3%, German GDP was up 0.7% and French GDP grew 0.5%, although there has been plenty of skeptical commentary from analysts about the sustainability of the trend. Goldman Sachs highlighted that Eurostat does not release a GDP breakdown by components until its second estimate of GDP (due on Sept 5th), making it difficult to assess what drove underlying growth. Second quarter GDP figures from Italy and Spain remained in contraction, at -0.2% and -0.1%, respectively.

– The rebound in gold prices over the last several weeks inspired some to say a floor has been found in the yellow metal, although others called it merely a technical move inspired by light, low-volume summer trading. In any case, there will certainly be more risk-off trading ahead of the multiple momentous events on tap for September, making safe havens potentially more attractive. In a note to clients on Thursday, JP Morgan wrote that they would “encourage shorter-term investors to consider getting long the gold space with a four to five week time horizon.” The SPDR Gold Trust ETF saw the first increase in its daily holdings since June even as the biggest holder – Paulson & Co – finally announced it has squared more than half of its famous long position. Note also that the China Gold Association reported that Chinese Jan-Jun gold consumption rose to 706.36 tons, +54% y/y.

– The MBA mortgage applications for the week ending August 9th data saw its steepest decline since late June. This marks the 12th week of decline in mortgage applications out of the last 14 weeks (there was a faint +0.2% gain in the prior week). Mortgage activity has collapsed by over 50% in the last three months as the average 30-year mortgage rate has risen from around 3.50% to above 4.30% currently (with recent highs of 4.70% in early July). Meanwhile the August NAHB housing market sentiment index showed that confidence among homebuilders is at its highest level in nearly eight years, despite the rising mortgage rates.

– Retail names Walmart and Macys reported weak second quarter results and cut their FY forecasts. Both firms cited a very challenging retail environment and customer uncertainty. Walmart US comps were -0.3% while Macys’ were -0.8%. Kohls was a bit better but it also cut its FY outlook. High-end retailer Nordstrom’s earnings were ok, but it also cut its FY view, and comps, while still positive, decelerated from earlier in the year. In tech, Cisco reported decent fourth-quarter profits and revenue, but share fell sharply as management issued cautious Q1 guidance and announced 4,000 job cuts, citing an unusually “mixed and inconsistent” economic recovery.

– It has been more than a year since BlackBerry hired bankers to help it explore options for finding a strategic partner or licensing the BB10 operating system. This week BlackBerry announced another exploration of strategic alternatives, but this time it’s likely the board is looking to sell the entire company before it is too late. Reports noted that the effort over the last year uncovered very little interest from potential bidders, although some chatter this week suggested that Microsoft and Amazon might take a closer look at BlackBerry.

– Many tech stocks dropped this week on disappointing earnings results, but some of that was offset by renewed strength in Apple shares. Apple stock rose over 10% on the week after activist investor Carl Icahn debuted on twitter with an announcement that he had built a large stake in the consumer tech giant. Icahn said he had spoken with CEO Tim Cook and urged him to increase and accelerate its share buybacks.

– After a week of strife between the board of JC Penny and activist investor Bill Ackman, news arrived on Tuesday that Ackman resigned as a director. Ackman has been pressuring the board to quickly replace interim CEO Ullman, saying that they are taking too long to make a decision on a new chief. On Friday, Ackman reached an agreement with Penney on terms for an orderly sale of his 17.7% stake in the future.

– The Department of Justice filed suit to block the merger between US Airways and American Airlines, citing anti-trust concerns. The DOJ asserted that the merger would lead to less competition and higher prices for consumers. JP Morgan said it remains cautiously optimistic that the firms can legally prevail in their efforts to merge, although the case would probably take months to resolve and could prompt American to emerge from bankruptcy without merging.

– China had a wild trading day on Friday: the Shanghai Comp spiked much as 5% before quickly returning to the flat line thanks to a trading glitch at Everbright Securities. There was more vague press talk of possible RRR cuts and targeted fiscal stimulus measures, but nothing formal was announced. Yum Brands’ shares fell after the firm reported Chinese SSS losses narrowed less than many had expected in July, though Yum still reiterated that China comps would be back to growth by the fourth quarter.

– EUR/USD remained in the 1.3200-1.3400 range where it has traded for the past three weeks. The greenback was bid for most of the week thanks to higher bond yields, but even given that factor the pair remained range bound. Note that after the pretty strong August German ZEW survey, ZEW economists wrote that the ECB was gaining more scope for rate increases as the euro zone crisis dies down.

– The dissent of monetary policy committee member Weale revealed by the BoE minutes this week raised some questions about the BoE’s newly minted forward guidance. Note that Weale himself stated that he supported forward guidance, but wanted a shorter horizon on the inflation threshold, given the threat of higher medium-term inflation expectations. Both UK July home prices and retail sales data were better than expected, and GBP/USD probed above the 1.5580 level to make two-month highs.

– The yen reversed some of last week’s strengthening trend in the wake of the miss in the Q2 GDP data, rising from 96.50 to above 98.50 at one point. Additional upward momentum in USD/JPY came from reports that the Abe administration was considering lower corporate taxes as a counterweight to the planned sales tax hike.

 

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GOOD TRADING

 

Trading Futures, Options on Futures, and retail off-exchange foreign currency transactions involves substantial risk of loss and is not suitable for all investors. You should carefully consider whether trading is suitable for you in light of your circumstances, knowledge, and financial resources. You may lose all or more of your initial investment. Opinions, market data, and recommendations are subject to change at any time.

 

Futures Trading Levels

Contract Sept. 2013  SP500 (big & Mini) Nasdaq100 (big & Mini) Dow Jones (big & Mini) Mini Russell Dollar Index
Resistance 3 1667.83 3133.67 15154 1033.43 81.65
Resistance 2 1662.42 3117.08 15116 1028.77 81.53
Resistance 1 1653.08 3093.42 15053 1020.53 81.40
Pivot 1647.67 3076.83 15015 1015.87 81.29
Support 1 1638.33 3053.17 14952 1007.63 81.16
Support 2 1632.92 3036.58 14914 1002.97 81.04
Support 3 1623.58 3012.92 14851 994.73 80.91
Contract Dec. Gold Sept. Silver Oct. Crude Oil Sept. Bonds  Sept. Euro
Resistance 3 1401.9 2416.5 108.81 131 30/32 1.3433
Resistance 2 1393.0 2388.5 108.20 131 16/32 1.3405
Resistance 1 1379.8 2351.5 107.50 131 1.3373
Pivot 1370.9 2323.5 106.89 130 18/32 1.3345
Support 1 1357.7 2286.5 106.19 130  2/32 1.3313
Support 2 1348.8 2258.5 105.58 129 20/32 1.3285
Support 3 1335.6 2221.5 104.88 129  4/32 1.3253
Contract Dec Corn Dec. Wheat Nov.Beans Dec. SoyMeal Dec. bean Oil
Resistance 3 508.5 657.2 1335.50 425.63 44.28
Resistance 2 497.0 655.3 1319.75 415.27 44.04
Resistance 1 491.3 654.4 1311.50 409.73 43.91
Pivot 479.8 652.6 1295.75 399.37 43.67
Support 1 474.0 651.7 1287.5 393.8 43.5
Support 2 462.5 649.8 1271.75 383.47 43.30
Support 3 456.8 648.9 1263.50 377.93 43.17
For complete contract specifications for the futures markets listed above click here!

5. Economic Reports

source:http://www.forexfactory.com/calendar.php

All times are Eastern time Zone (EST)

 

Date 4:19pm Currency Impact Detail Actual Forecast Previous Graph
TueAug 20  2:00am EUR German PPI m/m 0.2% 0.0%

 

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A Quick History of U.S. Futures Trading

Futures contracts are one of the most important financial innovations in history, but they are often misunderstood. These contracts are used to transfer risk between different parties. Futures markets originated as a way for producers to stabilize their income and/or raw material supply amid market fluctuations, but it soon grew into a way for speculators to bet on the direction of a given commodity. These two market forces interact to create the futures markets that we know today and each plays a critical role in the market’s dynamics.

Forward contracts vs. Futures contracts

Before the North American futures market originated some 150 years ago, farmers would grow their crops and then bring them to market in the hope of selling their inventory. But without any indication of demand, supply often exceeded what was needed and unpurchased crops were left to rot in the streets! Conversely, when a given commodity – wheat, for instance – was out of season, the goods made from it became very expensive because the crop was no longer available.

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Futures Trading Levels and Economic Reports for August 16, 2013

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4. Commodities Support and Resistance Levels – Corn, Wheat, Beans, Silver
5. Futures Economic Reports for Friday August 16, 2013

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