FuturesTechs Logo
FuturesTechs Quick Call Tel. 01702 333461

FuturesTechs Blog

Posts Tagged ‘Futures’

A quick thought on “evil short sellers”

Tuesday, September 30th, 2008

Short Selling, eh? This is a highly contentious issue, of course, but mostly because there is a lack of real understanding about the mechanics of the market, particularly by politicians and churchmen.

Data Explorers is a fine company that I came across a few years back thanks to an introduction from a good friend of mine in the Stock Loan industry. In simple terms they track percentage of stock that is “on loan”, which gives an indication of the amount of shorting happening in any particular stock. They do a lovely job of collating all the data from the various firms who are involved in this industry, then redistributing it to give everyone a “bigger picture” view (this info doesn’t come cheap, mind!).

Their figures show that there wasn’t any extraordinary shorting going on in many financial stocks in recent weeks, and therefore the banning of short selling is probably a complete waste of time, and is a knee jerk reaction to uninformed people’s ranting on about city fat cats.

Now let’s look at the share prices of our high street banks. Let’s pluck RBS out of the air as an example. The ban on short selling, designed to stop large downward movement in the share price, was announced last Friday morning, and RBS traded up to a high of 263. Where is it now, without the evil fat cats able to short it? 164 is the answer. So has it helped? You be the judge.

Also now bear (no pun intended) this in mind: Today the market has recovered some of yesterday’s drubbing after a bad start. FTSE Futures are up 233 points from last night’s late close as I write this at 12.30 on September 30th. This sort of recovery sometimes has shorts running for cover, and their buying can exacerbate the up-move, except the shorts have been banned from their trading activities, so they haven’t got anything to cover, and it could be argued that this has created a false market that’s actually stopping or at least stalling the recovery, by taking out an entire potential stream of buyers “on the bounce”…

What a mess we’ve got oursleves into…

And now for something I said in my Dow report today, and I quote:

“Can I ask we all put something into perspective for a moment please? We may have just seen the biggest one day points drop ever, yes, but I was just starting my career in 1987, when the Dow dropped from 2246 to 1737 (22%) in one session. 1706.9 (the low a few days after black Monday) was never revisited…”
Even without potential shorts covering, and even without a bailout plan, maybe we’re “doing the capitulation thing” right now, maybe the panic will be over by the end of the week, and maybe good old fashioned buying and selling; supply and demand; can work this thing out…
Safe trading, and let’s hope we all look back on this in 6 months, content that it got sorted without everything going “to the dog house”, which is what most people seem to be thinking at the moment…

Is it all change?

Monday, July 21st, 2008

We are watching these markets very carefully right now as there is a confluence of events that suggest things may be changing. We don;t often start talking the funny-mentals, and we don’t often worry about relationships between markets, however close they may be. But I’m going to make an exception in this instance.

Price action in Oil is probably tantamount to the whole thing. Western economies are on the brink of recession, triggered by the Credit Crunch, but exacerbated by the soaring price of Oil. The Central Banks are meant to raise rates in response to rising inflation, but the current rise in inflation is nothing to do with people over-spending. Far from it. If Central Banks raise rates on this basis it will be disastrous.

We need Food and Energy prices to come down to take the inflationary pressure off.

So now we turn to our charts:

Just looking at the contracts we cover here at FuturesTechs we see the following:

Corn is well off it’s highs. We topped out at 799.2 in June. As I write this we’re trading 625. Pressure off.

Wheat’s all time high was set back in February. The recent high/failure was bang on a Fibonacci retracement level. So that’s going down as well.

Soybeans only topped out in early July and so far haven’t taken out any really big supports on the way back down, although price action in recent days has totally favoured the Bears.

Brent Crude Oil has dropped from a high of $147.50 on July 11th to 129.66 on Friday. We have posted a “Three Black Crows” Candlestick reversal pattern; a significant reversal. That was last Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday (15th, 16th, 17th July). On Friday (18th July) and so far today (21st July) price action has favoured the Bears (Dolly could spoil the party, though).

So Ags are well off their highs and Oil has had a reaction lower that’s like nothing we’ve ever seen before. At the same time Bond prices are selling off hard (the “flight to quality” trade unwinding) and Equities are staging a recovery.

Most are calling this a “Dead Cat Bounce” (a rally in a Bear market that doesn’t last long!), but when you factor in everything else we’ve just highlighted you start to at least ponder this: Is the worst of the bad news over? Are we “all done” with this sell-off? One thing that favours this is the negativity of the popular press. You know things are about to turn when you can’t find a single bit of good news in the press, and I put the business pages down yesterday morning because it was putting me off my breakfast!!

Where did FuturesTechs come from?

Wednesday, May 28th, 2008

We have had our new website available for around 1 month now and we are starting to gain momentum for our new “per end user” offering. Private Investors, CFD and Spread Bet traders are starting to sign up and see the value of our service.

In recent days we’ve seen some interesting moves in the markets:

Gold Futures have turned over and after a plethora of sell signals yesterday we went Bearish this morning, just before the market sold off sharply.

Brent Crude Oil Futures has seen a big sell off but we’re certain this is merely a buying opportunity.

We have remained Bearish in the short term on Equity markets but our patience is being tested on this, particularly in the DAX Future, never one to willingly play the game!!

Interestingly today’s early high/failure in the S&P 500 Futures could be key and suggests that the market can head lower in the short term.

Login for a free trial to see our thoughts on these movements in more detail.

So to a question we’ve been asked a few times of late: Where did we appear from?

We have been servicing professional traders for 8 years now. The company formed in March 2000, soon after the closure of the LIFFE Floor. The traders who congregated on the LIFFE Floor headed up to different offices around this time, and suddenly they needed an edge, they needed information. I always had a string of traders who used to come and have a chat about the charts when I was based on the Floor, and so it was a natural progression to turn this into a daily commentary. I started by sending out a daily report on Bunds and T-Notes, and it grew from there. We grew with the Industry. Proprietary trading accounts for a good percentage of the daily Volume on exchanges like LIFFE and Eurex.

We wanted to expand our horizons beyond this arena, though, so it was a choice of Banks and Hedge Funds or Private/Retail Customers. Which way to jump!? We have found over the years that “bean counters” at the Institutions can cause problems for services like us, because they see a lot of free technical analysis being provided by the large brokers vying for their business. “Why pay for something that you can get for nothing?” -they say.

So we came up with the idea of a Members website where the reports can be viewed securely, on a “per end user” basis, which allows us to significantly reduce the price without upsetting our existing professional clients who pay for a “Site Licence” and the ability to distribute the reports amongst their traders.

We encourage you to take advantage of the chance to utilise this professional trading tool in your daily trading routine.

The week so far - Equities still rallying, Oil all time highs… again!

Wednesday, May 7th, 2008

We were cheered by last Thursday’s rally in Equity markets, where the technical charts gave breakaway signals on several markets. Since then many Equity markets have held key support levels and we continue to move higher.

We are now at levels not seen since January in markets like the DAX Futures (next target gap resistance at 7342.5), the FTSE 100 Futures (there’s an upside gap at 6337.5) and the S&P 500 Futures (with another gap at 1451.20 that we’re targeting).

In the meantime the “hot” story right now is Oil, which is making new all time highs almost by the day. Goldman Sachs came out with a target of $200 for a 6 month to 2 year view. This was the same chap that targeted $100 a few years back which was met with guffaws at the time. Say no more.

Technically there’s been very little in the way of sell signals in Oil in recent years. At FuturesTechs I think we’ve been Bullish more or less non-stop since $30!!

Our next short term target area for the ICE Brent Crude Oil contract is £123.37-65. We use Elliott Wave projections to come up with these targets.

Gold and Silver are getting close to giving fresh sell signals so we’re watching this situation closely.

Our sell trade in Soybean Futures hasn’t gone exactly to plan although we are yet to close above our stop level of 1305.

Hope you’re having a good week, and if you’re in the UK I hope you’re enjoying this bout of fine weather!!

Cheers,

Clive.

web design company: Silkstream