Monday, December 7, 2009

Commodity Weekly Technical Outlook

ONG Focus - Technical Written by Oil N'
Comex Gold (GC)

Gold soared to new record high of 1227.5 last week but failed to sustain above 1200 level and dropped sharply to close at 1162.3. While a short term top is no doubt in place at 1227.5, it's still a bit early to call for reversal yet. We'll stay neutral for the moment and expects some sideway trading between 1130.1 and 1227.5 first. There could still be at least one more rise in gold towards medium term projection target at 1258 before turning into medium term consolidation. However, sustained break of 1130.1 will suggest that rise from 931.3 has completed and deeper correction could then be seen towards 55 days EMA (now at 1092.9).

In the bigger picture, rise from 681 is expected to develop into a set of five wave sequence with first wave completed at 1007.7, second wave triangle consolidation completed at 931.3. Rise from 931.3 is treated as the third wave and there is no confirmation of completion yet. Such rally is still expected to continue towards 100% projection of 681 to 1007.7 from 931.3 at 1258 next. However, decisive break of 1130.1 support will argue that rise from 931.3 has completed ahead of 1258 target and some deeper pull back could be seen to 1026.9/1072 support zone, or even further to retest 1000 psychological level, before resuming the long term up trend.

In the long term picture, rise form 681 is treated as resumption of the long term up trend from 1999 low of 253 after interim consolidation from 1033.9 has completed in form of an expanding triangle. Next long term target is 100% projection of 253 to 1033.9 from 681 at 1460 level. We'll hold on to the bullish view as long as 931.3 structural support holds.


















Nymex Crude Oil (CL)
Crude oil's rebound from 72.39 was limited at 79.04 and well below mentioned 80.51 resistance. Crude oil then weakened again with a break of 75.18 minor support on Friday. The development firstly indicates that recovery from 72.39 has completed and thus flip the bias back to the downside for a retest on 72.39 initially this week. Secondly, there is no indication that choppy fall from 82.0 has finished and thus more downside will remain in favor in near term. Break of 72.39 will target trend line support at 71.16 next.

In the bigger picture, question remains on whether crude oil's medium term rebound from 33.2 has completed at 82.0 already and the outlook is quite mixed so far. Nevertheless, now, as long as 79.04 resistance holds, fall from 82.0 will remain in favor to continue and we'd slightly prefer the bearish case that crude oil has topped out at 82.0 already. Sustained trading below the trend line support (now at 71.16) will add more credence to this case and target 58.32 cluster support (50% retracement of 33.2 to 82 at 57.60) for confirmation.

On the upside, though, above 79.04 resistance will suggest that recent choppy price actions from 82.0 are merely consolidations in the medium term rise from 33.2. In such case, the rise from 33.2 might be ready to resume for another high above 82.0. However, as we expect such rise to conclude inside resistance zone of 76.77/90.24 (38.2% and 50% retracement of 147.27 to 33.2), focus will remain on loss of momentum and reversal signal in this case.

In the long term picture, there is no change in the view that fall from 147.27 is part of the correction to the five wave sequence from 98 low of 10.65. While the rebound from 33.2 is strong and might continue, there is no solid evidence that suggest fall 147.27 is completed and we're still preferring the case that rebound from 33.2 is merely a corrective rise only. Having said that strong resistance should be seen between 76.77/90.24 fibo resistance zone and bring reversal for another low below 33.2 before completing the whole correction from 147.27.

Predictions 2010: Markets & Economy

Oliver Quillia for CNBC.com
Everyone else is throwing darts at the future, but can you honestly think of even a half dozen prognosticators that have been totally right in the last two years? Maybe the gloom and doom crowd were scoring big early on, but many of them missed the stock market rally.

So here goes 2010:
1. Economy.
Economists say unemployment should peak in the first part of the year, somewhere just shy of 11 percent. What I hope is that the hiring is not just from short-lived stimulus spending, and that companies actually see the benefit of adding to their payrolls as soon as Q1.

2. Trouble ahead.
We all know there are more catalysts for crisis out there, whether its commercial real estate or some country debt. I hope the Fed has it right, and it is keeping rates low to heal the system, not just firing up another recipe for future disasters.

3. Double Dip.
It's possible there could be a double dip recession, sooner or later, so let's hope
that's wrong. The frailty of the recovery depends so much on confidence. Businesses have to realize there may be opportunities now if they open their check books. They can go along way to help consumers come out of their shells......etc

http://www.cnbc.com/id/34124419

Sunday, December 6, 2009

Week Ahead: Road Upward for Stocks Is Getting Rougher

CNBC.com
The road higher for stocks is likely to be a slower, more difficult climb that could get bumpy along the way. For that reason, a number of strategists have been recommending investors steer clear of lower quality stocks and focus instead on those with better balance sheets for this next leg of the trip. In the week ahead, markets will be tested by a fresh batch of economic news and will be dominated by the debate over whether the dollar's behavior signals the beginning of a turn for the greenback. Fed Chairman Ben Bernanke is in the spotlight Monday when he speaks at the Economic Club of Washington, and President Obama is expected to unveil a new plan to promote job creation Tuesday. Retail sales, international trade and weekly jobless claims are some of the important numbers to watch. The Treasury is auctioning $74 billion in 3-years, 10-years and 30-year bonds Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday.

http://mobile.cnbc.com/us_news/34282463

Rally may have legs, but beware of Scrooge
(Reuters) - If the bulls have their way, Wall Street's rally will keep going next week on signs of stability in the labor market. But concerns about penny-pinching consumers during the holiday shopping season and the specter of higher interest rates may be a hurdle to jump.The Standard & Poor's 500 is up 63.5 percent from a 12-year closing low on March 9, while expectations of a significant sell-off before year-end have waned. Any dip is likely to be met with buyers eager to get into the market.Investors are optimistic that the U.S. economy is on the path to recovery, albeit a slow one, after Friday's data showed employers cut far fewer jobs than expected in November.Even so, worries that consumers will remain frugal during the holiday shopping season are keeping a lid on investors' enthusiasm. And after Friday's data showing the labor market picture improved in November, there's speculation that the Federal Reserve may have to raise interest rates sooner than previously expected.

http://mobile.reuters.com/mobile/m/FullArticle/p.rdt/CBUS/nbusinessNews_uUSTRE5B401N20091205

Friday, December 4, 2009

Market Rally Will Continue into 2010: S&P Equity Strategist

By: JeeYeon Park CNBC News Associate

The Dow jumped Friday morning on a jobs report that suggested unemployment is finally starting to peak. What should investors be watching for in the next few weeks? Alec Young, equity strategist at Standard & Poor’s, shared his market outlook.“The market needs news—we’ve been bumping up on this 1,110 level on the S&P, which is a key technical resistance level,” Young told CNBC.“We’ve been spending 6 weeks trying to clear this level and we’ve had a lot of good news—the risk trade’s been working; the dollar’s been weak; the commodities strong; energy, materials and areas we like have done well.”Young said the equity rally will continue into 2010, albeit at a more modest pace.

http://www.cnbc.com/id/34261839

‘Take Profit’ on Thailand Stocks, Credit Suisse Says

(Bloomberg) -- Investors should “take profit” on Thailand’s stocks as anti-government protesters intensify their rallies against Prime Minister Abhisit Vejjajiva, Credit Suisse Group advised. Gains in global markets in the past month offer investors a chance to sell their Thai holdings, including property stocks, Credit Suisse analyst Dan Fineman said in a report today, reiterating his “underweight” recommendation on the market. An election will be the best outcome for investors as this will give the government greater legitimacy, he added.

http://www.bloomberg.com/apps/news?pid=newsarchive&sid=aCOb8BZyfr3E

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