GOLD
Gold moved lower overnight to open at
1217.50/1218.50, which was also the low of the day. It then came
under buying pressure from short-covering and technical buying,
surging to a high of 1251.00/1252.00 as world shares fell and
despite better-than-expected U.S. new home sales data.
Gold had a nice rebound today,
finishing higher at 1247 after making a new intraday low. The price
action formed an outside day reversal warning. However, as the daily
trend remains bearish, the signal would have to be confirmed by an
up day tomorrow. Resistance is at Monday’s high of 1252, while
support is at the major low of 1180.
Gold had a nice rebound after making a
new intraday low despite better-than-expected U.S. new home sales
data.
Payroll processing firm ADP said
non-farm private employment rose by a seasonally adjusted 215,000
last month.
SPDR Gold Trust, the world’s largest
gold-backed exchange-traded fund, said its holdings fell 2.70 tonnes
to 838.71 tonnes.
SILVER
Silver moved higher overnight to open
at 19.20/19.25. It touched a low of 19.13/19.18 before following
gold to a high of 19.84/19.89. It closed the session at 19.81/19.86.
Silver outperformed, finishing higher
at 19.86, after making a new intraday low. This is also a reversal
warning, but only if confirmed by a higher close tomorrow. Support
is at the most recent low of 18.90, while resistance is at Monday’s
high in the 20.00 level.
The gold-silver ratio had a rough day,
dropping to 62.86 from fresh 64.26 highs. This was a potential
outside day key reversal, and can be a bearish signal. It would have
to be confirmed by a down-day tomorrow. If confirmed, it would open
up a retracement to the uptrend support line, which is currently at
59.78.
Silver turned higher after a mixed bag
of U.S. economic indicators gave bottom fishers reason to snap up
nicely priced positions.
Data howed that U.S. private-sector
hiring rose in November at the fastest clip in a year, the services
industry expanded at a decent pace last month
Investors worry that strong data could
prompt the Fed to begin scaling back its $85 billion in monthly bond
purchases as early as this month.
COPPER
On the Comex division of the New York
Mercantile Exchange, copper futures for March delivery traded at
USD3.178 a pound during European morning trade, up 0.3%.
Comex
copper prices traded in a range between USD3.159 a pound, the daily
low and a session high of USD3.188 a pound.
The March contract settled 0.47% lower on Tuesday to end at USD3.167 a pound.
Copper prices were likely to find support at USD3.158 a pound, the low from December 4 and resistance at USD3.215 a pound, the high from December 2.
The March contract settled 0.47% lower on Tuesday to end at USD3.167 a pound.
Copper prices were likely to find support at USD3.158 a pound, the low from December 4 and resistance at USD3.215 a pound, the high from December 2.
Copper futures edged higher on
Wednesday, as investors looked ahead to key U.S. economic data later
in the day to further gauge the strength of the economy and the need
for stimulus.
Copper rose as signs that the U.S.
economy was picking up speed bolstered investor interest in the
industrial metal.
Concerns that the U.S. Federal Reserve
may withdraw its commodities-friendly stimulus after robust
construction and factory data added to investor caution.
World production of refined copper grew
by 6 percent or 788,000 tonnes in the first eight months of the year,
compared with year-ago figures – ICSG.
CRUDE
On the New York Mercantile Exchange,
light sweet crude futures for delivery in January traded at USD97.03
a barrel, down 0.20%, after hitting an overnight session low of
USD96.09 and a high of USD97.53.
ICE Brent crude oil futures for
January delivery settled almost three-quarters of a dollar lower at
USD111.88 a barrel on Wednesday on expectations that demand will ease
for the benchmark as a new pipeline extension bring more supplies to
refiners in Texas from domestic-produced oil storage facilities in
Oklahoma.
The U.S. Energy Information Administration said in its weekly report that U.S. crude oil inventories fell by 5.6 million barrels in the week ended Nov. 29, well beyond expectations for a decline of 500,000 barrels.
Total U.S. crude oil inventories stood at 385.8 million barrels
The U.S. Energy Information Administration said in its weekly report that U.S. crude oil inventories fell by 5.6 million barrels in the week ended Nov. 29, well beyond expectations for a decline of 500,000 barrels.
Total U.S. crude oil inventories stood at 385.8 million barrels
Crude oil prices eased in Asia on
Thursday following a bullish drop in crude stocks in the United
States and with support from OPEC's decision to leave production
levels steady.
Crude oil gained as government data
showed an unexpected fall in U.S. stockpiles in the world’s largest
oil consumer.
U.S. Energy Information Administration
said in its weekly report that U.S. crude oil inventories fell by 5.6
million barrels.
OPEC agreed to renew for the first half
of 2014 a collective oil production cap of 30 million barrels a day.
Technical Levels
SUPPORT 1 | SUPPORT 2 | RESISTANCE 1 | RESISTANCE 2 | |
GOLD | 1223 | 1199 | 1261 | 1274 |
SILVER | 19.27 | 18.77 | 20.03 | 20.30 |
COPPER | 3.2225 | 3.1755 | 3.2955 | 3.3195 |
CRUDE | 96.47 | 95.74 | 97.75 | 98.84 |
Commodity Contract S3 S2 S1 R1 R2 R3
Global Economic Data
DATE | TIME | DATA | PRV | EXP | IMPACT |
05.12.13 | 7.00P.M | Prelim GDP q/q | 2.8% | 3.0% | STRONG |
05.12.13 | 7.00P.M | Unemployment Claims | 316k | 328k | STRONG |
05.12.13 | 8.30P.M | Factory Orders m/m | 1.7% | -0.9% | MEDIUM |
Prelim GDP q/q
FF Alert | Release date delayed by 9 days due to the US government shutdown; |
Source | Bureau of Economic Analysis (latest release) |
Measures | Annualized change in the value of all goods and services produced by the economy; |
Usual Effect | Actual > Forecast = Good for currency; |
Frequency | Released quarterly, about 60 days after the quarter ends; |
Next Release | Feb 28, 2014 |
FF Notes | While this is q/q data, it's reported in an annualized format (quarterly change x4). The 'Previous' listed is the 'Actual' from the Advance release and therefore the 'History' data will appear unconnected. There are 3 versions of GDP released a month apart - Advance, Preliminary, and Final. The Advance release is the earliest and thus tends to have the most impact; |
Why Traders Care |
It's the broadest measure of economic activity and the primary gauge of the economy's health; |
Also Called | GDP Second Release; |
Unemployment Claims
Source | Department of Labor (latest release) |
Measures | The number of individuals who filed for unemployment insurance for the first time during the past week; |
Usual Effect | Actual < Forecast = Good for currency; |
Frequency | Released weekly, 5 days after the week ends; |
Next Release | Dec 12, 2013 |
FF Notes | This is the nation's earliest economic data. The market impact fluctuates from week to week - there tends to be more focus on the release when traders need to diagnose recent developments, or when the reading is at extremes; |
Why Traders Care |
Although it's generally viewed as a lagging indicator, the number of unemployed people is an important signal of overall economic health because consumer spending is highly correlated with labor-market conditions. Unemployment is also a major consideration for those steering the country's monetary policy; |
Also Called | Jobless Claims, Initial Claims; |
Source | Department of Labor (latest release) |
Measures | The number of individuals who filed for unemployment insurance for the first time during the past week; |
Factory Orders m/m
Source | Census Bureau (latest release) |
Measures | Change in the total value of new purchase orders placed with manufacturers; |
Usual Effect | Actual > Forecast = Good for currency; |
Frequency | Released monthly, about 35 days after the month ends; |
Next Release | Jan 6, 2014 |
FF Notes | This report contains a revision of the Durable Goods Orders data released about a week earlier, and fresh data regarding non-durable goods; |
Why Traders Care |
It's a leading indicator of production - rising purchase orders signal that manufacturers will increase activity as they work to fill the orders; |
Source | Census Bureau (latest release) |
Measures | Change in the total value of new purchase orders placed with manufacturers; |
Usual Effect | Actual > Forecast = Good for currency; |
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