GOLD
Gold advanced overnight to open at the
intraday low of 1360.50/1361.50 following the ongoing crisis in
Ukraine.
It surged to a high of 1370.50/1371.50 on dollar weakness
as yields on 10- year U.S. Treasuries gave back some of last week’s
gains. The metal finally closed the day at 1369.50/1370.50.
Gold broke out of its range
of the past two weeks, taking out resistance just below 1360, and
closing higher at 1370. RSI has turned back to test the 70 level,
confirming the bullish move. The next resistance is at 1374, the
76.4% retracement of the move from 1433 to 1182. We are bullish so
long as we hold the recent lows in the 1326/27 area.
SILVER
Silver opened the day only slightly
higher at 20.98/21.03. Copper sold off to a three-and-a-half year
low on worries about credit troubles in China, which can potentially
lead to an oversupply of the metal.
This tempered silver’s
strength and saw the metal dip to a low of 20.93/20.98 before
recovering to a high of 21.39/21.44 on the back of gold. It closed
the session at 21.33/21.38.
Silver also closed higher at 21.38.
There is a daily downtrend in place since the high on Feb 24th.
While it is still possible that the formation since silver’s
breakout is a bullish flag, the flag retraced a considerable part of
the breakout, which is not ideal. Also there is a pattern of
declining RSI. We are currently neutral until silver can make a
break out of its current downtrend. Support is at the recent low of
20.61.
The gold-silver ratio is trading lower
at 64.11. Uptrend support comes in at 62.58. Resistance is at the
2014 high of 65.37
COPPER
On the Comex division of the New York
Mercantile Exchange, copper futures for May delivery tumbled to a
session low of $2.908 a pound, the weakest level since July 2010.
Copper last traded at $2.917 a pound
during European morning hours, down 1.2%, or $0.035 cents. The May
copper contract lost 2.62%, or $0.079 cents, on Tuesday to settle at
$2.952 a pound.
Futures were likely to find support at
$2.844 a pound, the low from July 2010 and resistance at $3.057 a
pound, the high from March 11.
Investors remained cautious after data
released over the weekend showed that Chinese exports fell 18.1% on a
year-over-year basis in February, confounding expectations for a 6.8%
increase, following a rise of 10.6% in January.
The significant decline in China’s
exports led to a deficit of $22.98 billion last month, compared to a
surplus of $31.86 billion in January. Analysts had expected a surplus
of $14.5 billion in February.
The downbeat data highlighted concerns
about slowing growth in the world's biggest consumer of the
industrial metal.
Copper prices plunged to the lowest
level since July 2010 on Wednesday, amid ongoing concerns over the
health of China’s economy.
CRUDE
On the New York
Mercantile Exchange, West Texas Intermediate crude for delivery in
April traded at $98.14 a barrel, up 0.15%, after hitting an overnight
session low of $97.57 a barrel and a high of $99.63 a barrel.
Brent crude on the ICE futures exchange
settled down 0.5%, at $108.02 a barrel on Wednesday.
The U.S. Energy Information
Administration said in its weekly report Wednesday that U.S. crude
oil inventories rose by 6.2 million barrels in the week ended March
7, well above market expectations for a 2.2-million barrel increase.
Total U.S. crude oil inventories stood
at 370 million barrels as of last week.
The report also showed that total motor
gasoline inventories decreased by 5.2 million barrels, compared to
forecasts for a drop of 2 million barrels, while distillate
stockpiles decreased by 533,000 barrels, below expectations for a
withdrawal of 867,000 barrels.
Oil prices came under additional
pressure on reports that the U.S. plans to release up to 5 million
barrels of oil from its Strategic Petroleum Reserves, according to a
government source.
Crude oil prices gained in early Asian
trade on Thursday, shrugging off bearish data overnight that revealed
U.S. stockpiles shot up last week and sent the near-term contract to
a one-month low, with the focus now on data from China on industrial
output and retail sales.
Technical
Levels
|
SUPPORT 1 |
SUPPORT 2 |
RESISTANCE 1 |
RESISTANCE 2 |
GOLD |
1353 |
1336 |
1379 |
1388 |
SILVER |
21.07 |
20.68 |
21.45 |
21.83 |
COPPER |
2.9923 |
2.9586 |
3.0533 |
3.1183 |
CRUDE
|
97.16 |
96.33 |
99.21 |
101.26 |
Commodity Contract S2 S1 R1 R2
Global
Economic Data
TIME :IST
|
DATA |
PRV |
EXP |
IMPACT |
6.00P.M |
Core Retail Sales m/m |
0.0% |
0.2% |
STRONG |
6.00P.M |
Retail Sales m/m
|
-0.4% |
0.3% |
STRONG |
6.00P.M |
Unemployment Claims |
323K |
334K
|
STRONG |
Core
Retail Sales m/m
Source |
Census Bureau (latest release) |
Measures |
Change in the total value of sales at the retail level,
excluding automobiles; |
Usual Effect |
Actual > Forecast = Good for currency; |
Frequency |
Released monthly, about 14 days after the month ends; |
Next Release |
Apr 14, 2014 |
FF Notes |
Automobile sales account for about 20% of Retail Sales, but
they tend to be very volatile and distort the underlying trend.
The Core data is therefore thought to be a better gauge of
spending trends; |
Also Called |
Retail Sales Ex Autos; |
Retail
Sales m/m
Source |
Census Bureau (latest release) |
Measures |
Change in the total value of sales at the retail level; |
Usual Effect |
Actual > Forecast = Good for currency; |
Frequency |
Released monthly, about 14 days after the month ends; |
Next Release |
Apr 14, 2014 |
FF Notes |
This is the earliest and broadest look at vital consumer
spending data; |
Why Traders Care |
It's the primary gauge of consumer spending, which accounts for
the majority of overall economic activity; |
Also Called |
Advance Retail Sales; |
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 |
Mar 20, 2014 |
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; |
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