Video with Trade Ideas for Crude Oil and T-bonds 6.22.2017

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Voted #1 Blog and #1 Brokerage Services on TraderPlanet for 2016!! 

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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

6-22-2017
Continue reading “Video with Trade Ideas for Crude Oil and T-bonds 6.22.2017”

Walk before you Run!! – Trading Futures 6.21.2017

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Voted #1 Blog and #1 Brokerage Services on TraderPlanet for 2016!! 

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Walk before you run

By Cannon Trading staff

The image of a successful futures trader is that of a lone wolf surveying the landscape looking for an opportunity to attack and seize quick and substantial profits. We all know about the potential for making a fortune in the futures markets. Yet, few do so. Why is that? What are some of the common pitfalls that prevent this dream from becoming a reality for most futures traders? Continue reading “Walk before you Run!! – Trading Futures 6.21.2017”

Futures Trading Levels & Economic Reports for June 16th

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Rollover Notice:

Front month for stock indices and financials is now September. Make sure you switched from trading June into trading the September  (U) contract. Please contact your broker with any questions.

As of tomorrow start trading September currencies as well!

Continue reading “Futures Trading Levels & Economic Reports for June 16th”

Useful Tools and Resources for Commodity Traders! 5.02.2017

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Voted #1 Blog and #1 Brokerage Services on TraderPlanet  for 2016!! 

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FOMC later this week! Make sure to check section 3 of this newsletter for different economic reports that affect the market.

Earnings season is here, so pay attention and know when major earnings coming out if you are trading stock index futures.

Good source for earnings: http://finance.yahoo.com/calendar/earnings

On a different note, some interesting general info, tools and resources put together for your reading by our own brokers at:

https://www.cannontrading.com/tools/futures-commodities-trading-resources

Futures Levels & Economic Reports 11.04.2015

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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 November 04, 2015

Hello Traders,

For 2015 I would like to wish all of you discipline and patience in your trading!

Did not have too much of added value to share with you today so decided to point you into a resource that is not on our site ( but will be soon)  that may be useful for you and includes a few videos:https://vimeo.com/cannontradingcompany/videos

Many ways to trade any market, many ways to lose money in any market and only very few ways to lock in gains. If you need help creating a trading plan, visit our broker assist services.

Many ways to trade any market, many ways to lose money in any market and only very few ways to lock in gains. If you need help creating a trading plan,visit our broker assist services.

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.

If you like Our Futures Trading Daily Support and Resistance Levels, Please share!


Futures Trading Levels

Contract Dec. 2015 SP500 Nasdaq100 Dow Jones Mini Russell Dollar Index
Resistance 3 2133.42 4783.00 18133 1212.83 98.32
Resistance 2 2121.83 4755.25 18015 1203.77 97.95
Resistance 1 2112.17 4732.50 17925 1195.83 97.60
Pivot 2100.58 4704.75 17807 1186.77 97.22
Support 1 2090.92 4682.00 17717 1178.83 96.87
Support 2 2079.33 4654.25 17599 1169.77 96.50
Support 3 2069.67 4631.50 17509 1161.83 96.15
Contract Dec. Gold Dec. Silver Dec. Crude Oil Dec. Bonds Dec.   Euro
Resistance 3 1156.6 15.66 51.25 157 22/32 1.1117
Resistance 2 1147.3 15.56 49.80 156 31/32 1.1077
Resistance 1 1132.2 15.41 48.85 155 28/32 1.1023
Pivot 1122.9 15.31 47.40 155 5/32 1.0983
Support 1 1107.8 15.16 46.45 154 2/32 1.0929
Support 2 1098.5 15.06 45.00 153 11/32 1.0889
Support 3 1083.4 14.91 44.05 152 8/32 1.0835
Contract Dec. Corn Dec. Wheat Jan Beans Dec. SoyMeal Dec. Nat Gas
Resistance 3 389.8 530.8 896.58 308.20 2.36
Resistance 2 386.0 523.7 891.67 306.70 2.32
Resistance 1 383.3 520.1 885.33 304.00 2.30
Pivot 379.5 512.9 880.42 302.50 2.27
Support 1 376.8 509.3 874.1 299.8 2.2
Support 2 373.0 502.2 869.17 298.30 2.21
Support 3 370.3 498.6 862.83 295.60 2.18
Economic Reports

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

All times are Eastern time Zone (EST)

 

Date 4:00pm Currency Impact Detail Actual Forecast Previous Graph
WedNov 4  3:15am EUR Spanish Services PMI 55.5 55.1
3:45am EUR Italian Services PMI 53.7 53.3
3:50am EUR French Final Services PMI 52.3 52.3
3:55am EUR German Final Services PMI 55.2 55.2
4:00am EUR ECB President Draghi Speaks
EUR Final Services PMI 54.2 54.2
5:00am EUR PPI m/m -0.4% -0.8%
5:30am USD FOMC Member Brainard Speaks
8:15am USD ADP Non-Farm Employment Change 183K 200K
8:30am USD Trade Balance -42.7B -48.3B
9:45am USD Final Services PMI 54.6 54.4
10:00am USD Fed Chair Yellen Testifies
USD ISM Non-Manufacturing PMI 56.6 56.9
10:30am USD Crude Oil Inventories 2.5M 3.4M
2:30pm USD FOMC Member Dudley Speaks
7:30pm USD FOMC Member Fischer Speaks

 

This is not a solicitation of any order to buy or sell, but a current market view provided by Cannon Trading Inc. Any statement of facts here in contained are derived from sources believed to be reliable, but are not guaranteed as to accuracy, nor they purport to be complete. No responsibility is assumed with respect to any such statement or with respect to any expression of opinion herein contained. Readers are urged to exercise their own judgment in trading

 

Market Weekly Update & Futures Levels 9.15.2015

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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 September 15, 2015

Hello Traders,

For 2015 I would like to wish all of you discipline and patience in your trading!

Greetings! 

TradeTheNews.com Weekly Market Update: Markets Stabilize Ahead of FOMC Decision

Fri, 11 Sep 2015 16:07 PM ESTThe volatility seen over the last month in global markets gave way to relative calm this week. US markets were subdued thanks to the Labor Day weekend holiday and a schedule light on major data releases. There was a notable increase in corporate debt issues as companies tried to get ahead of Fed hikes later this year, although the jury remains out on the feasibility of policy tightening at next week’s FOMC meeting. Other highlights included the excellent JOLTs job openings report, Apple’s product refresh, and various investor conferences where management teams largely indicated that prior guidance (or the low end) remains achievable despite the recent uptick in global growth concerns. Shanghai reopened for trade after a two-day holiday to another weak Chinese trade report, which inspired equity gains on hopes for more stimulus spending. US Treasury yields backed up modestly, as prices were pressured by supply from both corporate and government sales. For the week, the S&P and DJIA each gained 2% and the Nasdaq added 3%.Job openings in America hit another record high in July. The latest Job Openings and Labor Turnover Survey (JOLTS) – one of Fed Chair Yellen’s favorite gauges of labor market health – showed that job openings jumped to 5.75 million in July, the highest since the series began in December 2000. With openings at record highs, robust employment should be accompanied by a sustained pickup in wages, just another data point that suggests the Fed needs to tighten sooner rather than later. On Sunday, Fed watcher Hilsenrath wrote that dovish voter Williams told him he was anticipating liftoff this year if risks diminish, but that personally he remained on the fence regarding hikes. “All of the data that we have had up until now has been, I think, encouraging. It has been about as good, or better, than I was expecting, in terms of the U.S. economy. But there are some pretty significant headwinds that have developed,” said Williams.Chinese markets cooled off this week and volatility flattened out to a degree. On Tuesday, the August China trade surplus topped consensus but the decline in both exports and imports raised concerns. Exports fell 5.5% y/y, better than the 8.3% decline in July, while imports fell double the anticipated rate (-13.8% y/y v -6%e). The two-month slide in exports is causing extreme discomfort in Beijing, and the Shanghai Composite gained more than 5% on Tuesday and Wednesday on hope the ugly data would prompt yet another round of government stimulus. The August CPI and PPI data would complicate any PBoC action, as CPI inflation hit a one-year high of 2%, driven by surging food prices, while PPI inflation declined 5.9%. With costs higher and manufacturing prices lower, the outlook is only getting murkier.

In Japan, the Nikkei index gained 2.7% this week, snapping a four-week losing streak. Prime Minister Abe consolidated his power by winning a new mandate as leader of his party, and he urged companies to boost capital expenditures now that the Abenomics program is in full swing. Abe also announced that he wants to lower the corporate tax by at least another 3.3% in 2016 in support of his plans to get the corporate tax rate below 30%. An upward revision in the final Q2 GDP to -0.3% from the -0.4% preliminary reading eased some concerns about Japan heading toward yet another recession.

Continue reading “Market Weekly Update & Futures Levels 9.15.2015”

Economic Reports & Futures Levels 8.11.2015

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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 11, 2015

Hello Traders,

For 2015 I would like to wish all of you discipline and patience in your trading!

Hello Traders,

TradeTheNews.com Weekly Market Update: See You in September
Fri, 07 Aug 2015 16:27 PM EST

US equity indices saw modest losses this week and the 10-year yield pulled back to levels last seen in late May as investors continued to brood over the timing of Fed rate liftoff. The consensus heading into Friday’s July jobs report was that any non-farm payrolls figure above +200K would support expectations for the Fed to tighten policy in September, and the +215K figure on Friday did the job. In China, the government extended its campaign of heavy-handed interventions to keep the Shanghai Composite steady. Economic data continued to suggest the economy is slowing: the official China manufacturing PMI index stalled out in July, hitting 50.0 after four months of very slight expansion. Europe is finally seeing solid improvements in economic data, with most of the continent’s July manufacturing PMI data beating expectations and firmly in expansion territory (although France did slip back into contraction in the month). For the week, the DJIA lost -1.8%, the S&P dropped -1.2%, and the Nasdaq gave up -1.7%.

The non-farm payrolls total came in slightly below expectations, but overall the July jobs report still indicates some improvement in the US labor market. Employers added 215,000 jobs in July, 10 thousand less than expected, but this marked the 58th consecutive month of job gains, the longest stretch on record. Both the June and May figures were revised slightly higher. Unemployment didn’t budge from its post-crisis low of 5.3%, while average hourly earnings rose 0.2% sequentially and 2.1% on an annualized basis, on par with the pace of much of the expansion. The labor-force participation rate remained at a multi-decade low, suggesting there remains quite a bit of slack in the labor market. The consensus heading into the data was that any figure above +200K would keep the Fed on track for tightening policy in September, and based on Fed-funds futures, the odds of a September hike rose to 56% from 46% before the jobs report.

In other US economic data, personal spending and core PCE growth held steady at low levels in July, although the y/y figure was a hair higher. The July ISM manufacturing index fell to 52.7 from 53.5 the month before, however the new orders component rose slightly to 56.5 from 56.0 in June, marking the highest reading since December. The July ISM non-manufacturing index saw very strong growth, rising to 60.3 from 56 m/m, with a new orders component up at 63.8. Construction spending barely rose in June as private outlays posted their biggest drop in a year, but the May figures were revised up to +1.8% from +0.8% prior.

Continue reading “Economic Reports & Futures Levels 8.11.2015”

Market Recap & Economic Reports 8.04.2015

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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 4, 2015

Hello Traders,

For 2015 I would like to wish all of you discipline and patience in your trading!

Hello Traders,

TradeTheNews.com Weekly Market Update: Global Growth Concerns Linger, Fed Still Open to September Liftoff

US equity markets recovered some ground this week and the Shanghai Composite appeared to stabilize after another round of government pledges. The DJIA is looking a little shaky, weighed on by pain in the commodities related industrials, but the S&P500 is within sight of the recent all-time highs, notching a 1.2% gain on the week. Despite pledging hundreds of billions to prop up its market, China’s stocks sunk another 8.5% on Monday – the biggest one-day drop since 2007 – drawing another promise from the China Securities Finance Corporation(CSFC) to boost its stock purchases. The FOMC statement kept expectations of a September rate hike alive without pre-committing, while Thursday’s upward revisions to past core PCE readings and a hotter than expect initial Q2 core PCE print only supported that notion. Short term US Treasury yields backed up to levels not seen since early June as traders rotated into the US long bond, likely on the belief that rates can only rise very gradually under the current subdued growth outlook. The US Q2 employment cost index threw markets a bit of a curve ball on Friday, unwinding some of the week’s earlier bets the Fed was on the precipice of raising rates for the first time since 2006. The prospect of a Puerto Rico bond default over the weekend also dampened sentiment.

The semantic tweaks made to the FOMC statement released on Wednesday did not include any overt signals that rate hikes were imminent. However, Fed watchers characterized several minor changes as a hint that Fed officials see the economy closer than ever to full employment. For several meetings, the language talked about the need to see “additional” improvement in the labor market, but this was changed to “some” additional improvement. A related section stated that slack in the labor market had diminished, striking an earlier qualification that slack had diminished “somewhat.” On the inflation front, the statement dropped reference to “stabilized” energy prices, given that oil prices are retesting their spring lows, and it retained language that said inflation is running below the Fed’s 2% objective. The next FOMC meeting is scheduled for September 16-17.

The slowdown seen in the US Q2 employment cost index (ECI) had a broad impact on markets on Friday and made some question the viability of a September Fed rate hike. The report indicated that labor costs decelerated sharply in the quarter (+0.2% v +0.6%e), reversing Q1’s +0.7% figure and delivering the lowest rate of growth in 30 years. The Q1 reading suggested wage growth had picked up perceptibly from the stagnant trend of earlier years, holding out the hope for accelerating inflation and spending, with obvious implications for monetary policy. Analysts noted that some of the slowdown could be a reversal of a seasonal effect: the uptick in the first Q1 was concentrated in incentive-pay occupations, where bonuses and commissions can be volatile, and this pop reversed itself in the second quarter. Analysts caution that the adjusted data also rose in Q1 and decelerated in Q2. Commenting after the ECI release, Fed hawk Bullard said he was not concerned by the data, and that a September rate hike can’t be ruled out.

The first reading of Q2 US GDP was just fine, with the headline figure of +2.3% a hair below expectations but much better than the revised final Q1 figure of +0.6% (which itself was revised up from the -0.2% final report in June). Personal consumption beat expectations at +2.9%, while the export figure grew to +5.3% from -5.9% in the final Q1 report. Friday’s GDP report was the first to include new methodology meant to correct the tendency to slightly underestimate growth in Q1 and overestimate growth in Q3, due to issues in measuring military spending and consumer services. Under the new approach, the government has found that the US economy grew somewhat slower in 2012-14, at an average of +2.0% a year instead of +2.3%. The slowest recovery since the end of World War II is now even weaker than previously believed.

Continue reading “Market Recap & Economic Reports 8.04.2015”

Futures Levels & Economic Reports 7.28.2015

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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 July 28, 2015

Hello Traders,

For 2015 I would like to wish all of you discipline and patience in your trading!

Hello Traders,

TradeTheNews.com Weekly Market Update: Corporate Earnings Weigh on Markets

Earnings season has not been kind to equity markets this week. The DJIA fell 2.9%, and the S&P500 and Nasdaq each declined approximately 2.2% through Friday as a broad spectrum of corporate names offered weak June quarter reports. Commodity prices saw the recent declines accelerate aided by a strengthening US dollar: WTI broke below $50 for the first time since early April, copper reached its lowest level since 2009 and gold dropped to levels last seen in 2010, with both metals down more than 3% on the week. Chinese stocks were less volatile in the wake of the massive stabilization effort mounted by the government in recent weeks, but saw more disappointing China PMI data. Greece faded from the headlines even as Prime Minister Tspiras forced through two parliamentary votes to secure political support for a third bailout. The US Treasury market trended higher and by Friday the 10-year note was testing the 200-day moving average for the first time in weeks. The curve flattened when long end rates fell faster than short yields, suggesting traders maybe placing bets the Fed will indeed be able to raise rates later this year.
The June home sales reports were mixed. The annualized existing home sales rate rose to its highest rate in eight years, +3.2% y/y to 5.49M units, while limited supply helped push the national median home price to an all-time high. Conversely, the new home sales fell for the second month in a row in June to an annualized rate of 482K, and the May figure was revised lower. The new home sales rate is still up 18% y/y, however one analyst pointed out that the average annualized new home sales rate over the last 35 years was around 685K, suggesting the market has a ways to go.
US weekly initial jobless claims fell sharply to their lowest level since 1973 and widely undershot expectations. Analysts said not to read too much into the claims numbers, given they are strongly distorted by summer factory retooling shutdowns and school vacations, rather than any fundamental shifts in labor market conditions.
The broad commodity selloff got underway early during the Asian session on Monday morning, as gold prices fell almost 4% in a matter of seconds. Reportedly around five tons of gold bullion, equivalent to one-fifth of a whole day’s trade in a normal session, came on the market in China in a two-minute window. Gold prices fell sharply worldwide, and US spot prices dropped below $1,100 on Monday and quickly probed five-year lows below $1,087. Inventory reports helped take WTI crude below $50 again, down about 5% on the week: the DoE and API reports both returned to inventory drawdowns after a few weeks of builds. Meanwhile debate began in Congress on the Iranian nuclear deal (the GOP hates it but may not be able to stop it), while Tehran said it would hike crude oil production by 1M bpd once sanctions were lifted while a return to full production could only take six months.