Crude oil closed down $0.58 a barrel at $85.87 today. Prices closed nearer the session high today. The bulls have faded after last Friday's very weak U.S. jobs report. I would not be surprised to see choppy trading mostly between $80 and $90 a barrel for the next few weeks.
Gold futures closed down 8.00 an ounce at $1,868.70 today. Prices closed nearer the session low today after hitting a fresh all time record high of $1,923.70 in overnight trading. Profit taking pressure was featured as the day wore on. A stronger U.S. dollar index and lower crude oil prices were also bearish factors for gold today. The fact that U.S. stock indexes had moved well off their daily lows by the time gold closed was also negated for the precious yellow metal.
Natural gas closed up 5.6 cents at $3.928 today. Prices closed nearer the session high today and saw short covering in a bear market. Bears still have the solid near term technical advantage. The next upside price breakout objective for the bulls is closing prices above solid technical resistance at $4.159.
The U.S. stock indexes closed weaker today but well up form the session lows. Last Friday morning's very week U.S. jobs report has sunk the indexes. Key for the stock index bulls is to hold prices above the August lows. If they can do that, then those lows will likely mark major lows. If U.S. stock indexes drop below the August lows, then fresh, serious chart damage would be inflicted to suggest a fresh leg down in prices in the near term. Trading action in the stock indexes this week will be extra important.
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Tuesday, September 6, 2011
Crude Oil, Gold and Natural Gas Market Commentary For Tuesday Afternoon
Labels:
Barrel,
Crude Oil,
Dollar,
gold,
Natural Gas
Adam Hewison: It Never Seems to go Away, Does it?
It never seems to go away, does it?
What I’m referring to is the problems with the economy and the sovereign debt problems in Europe. It would appear as though no politician wants to touch these major economic problems with a ten foot pole. Of course like everyone else on the planet they are concerned about protecting their own jobs and getting reelected.
The market action in the equity markets today can only be described as negative. Gold may be having a major reversal, and the dollar is soaring to its best levels in quite some time. Like I have said before, the markets are never boring.
The pullback in crude oil from the top of the Donchian Trading Channel that we have mentioned in previous publications has now taken place. The October crude oil contract has also managed to ignite an intermediate term sell signal when it moved below the parabolic SAR indicator. This should indicate that we will see more sideways to lower price action. With a score of -65 we expect we will see a broader trading range with support coming in around the $80 a barrel level.
At the present time our long term monthly Trade Triangle indicator is negative while the weekly Trade Triangles is positive which is creating a mixed picture at the moment for crude oil. However, the longer term monthly Trade Triangle must be given more weight than either the daily or weekly Trade Triangles.
Monthly Trade Triangles for Long Term Trends = Negative
Weekly Trade Triangles for Intermediate Term Trends = Positive
Daily Trade Triangles for Short Term Trends = Negative
Combined Strength of Trend Score = – 65
Just click here for your FREE trend analysis of crude oil ETF USO
What I’m referring to is the problems with the economy and the sovereign debt problems in Europe. It would appear as though no politician wants to touch these major economic problems with a ten foot pole. Of course like everyone else on the planet they are concerned about protecting their own jobs and getting reelected.
The market action in the equity markets today can only be described as negative. Gold may be having a major reversal, and the dollar is soaring to its best levels in quite some time. Like I have said before, the markets are never boring.
The pullback in crude oil from the top of the Donchian Trading Channel that we have mentioned in previous publications has now taken place. The October crude oil contract has also managed to ignite an intermediate term sell signal when it moved below the parabolic SAR indicator. This should indicate that we will see more sideways to lower price action. With a score of -65 we expect we will see a broader trading range with support coming in around the $80 a barrel level.
At the present time our long term monthly Trade Triangle indicator is negative while the weekly Trade Triangles is positive which is creating a mixed picture at the moment for crude oil. However, the longer term monthly Trade Triangle must be given more weight than either the daily or weekly Trade Triangles.
Monthly Trade Triangles for Long Term Trends = Negative
Weekly Trade Triangles for Intermediate Term Trends = Positive
Daily Trade Triangles for Short Term Trends = Negative
Combined Strength of Trend Score = – 65
Just click here for your FREE trend analysis of crude oil ETF USO
Labels:
Crude Oil,
gold,
SP 500,
trade triangle,
Trend
Crude Oil Market Commentary For Tuesday Morning Sept. 6th
As the world wakes up Tuesday to a fresh round of currency wars [the Swiss getting a shot in this morning] oil traders remain focused on 82.95 as their next support target. Crude oil was lower due to profit taking in overnight trading. Stochastics and the RSI are overbought and are turning bearish signaling that the a-b-c correction off August's low might be coming to an end.
Closes below August's uptrend line crossing near 83.81 would confirm that the aforementioned correction has ended. If October renews the decline off May's high, the 75% retracement level of the 2009-2011 rally crossing at 71.73 is the next downside target. Closes above the reaction high crossing at 89.19 are needed to confirm that a short term low has been posted.
First resistance is last Thursday's high crossing at 89.90. Second resistance is the May-July downtrend line crossing near 93.88. First support is August's uptrend line crossing near 83.81. Second support is the reaction low crossing at 82.95. Crude oil pivot point for Tuesday morning is 84.53.
Closes below August's uptrend line crossing near 83.81 would confirm that the aforementioned correction has ended. If October renews the decline off May's high, the 75% retracement level of the 2009-2011 rally crossing at 71.73 is the next downside target. Closes above the reaction high crossing at 89.19 are needed to confirm that a short term low has been posted.
First resistance is last Thursday's high crossing at 89.90. Second resistance is the May-July downtrend line crossing near 93.88. First support is August's uptrend line crossing near 83.81. Second support is the reaction low crossing at 82.95. Crude oil pivot point for Tuesday morning is 84.53.
Monday, September 5, 2011
Chris Vermeulen: The Black Monday the Public Doesn’t Know About
Tonight I jumped on the computer so see what the futures market was up to. The good news was that our short trade on the equities market was up 10% from our entry point last week. The bad news was that the stock market overseas was selling off big and so were US stocks. It was a black Monday in both the sky and on the screen…
I’m not really sure how many people watch the futures market but I do know the majority of people do not. So Tuesday morning there will be a lot of people in a panic when they see stocks gap down sharply.
Taking a look at the 4 hour charts you can see the recent price action which unfolded today. We have been anticipating this from early last week. So none of this should be a surprise.
Dollar Index 4 Hour Chart:
The dollar index broke out of it falling pattern and has made a run up to the first resistance level of 75.40. I feel we could see it go a little higher on Tuesday but overall it looks ready for a pause or pullback here.
The dollar index broke out of it falling pattern and has made a run up to the first resistance level of 75.40. I feel we could see it go a little higher on Tuesday but overall it looks ready for a pause or pullback here.
SP500 Futures 4 Hour Chart:
The equities market has fallen sharply in the past week and the green circle is where we shorted the market using the SDS etf. We did take partial profits last week to lock in 7.4% profit in a couple days, but we still hold the balance of the position which is currently up over 10% using today’s futures price.
The equities market has fallen sharply in the past week and the green circle is where we shorted the market using the SDS etf. We did take partial profits last week to lock in 7.4% profit in a couple days, but we still hold the balance of the position which is currently up over 10% using today’s futures price.
The SP500 looks to be getting oversold here and is now entering the previous low set a few weeks back. I will be looking to tighten stops and or exit the position early this week before a sharp rebound takes place.
Bond Futures 4 Hour Chart:
Bonds are a safe haven for investors when fear is running high. The past couple trading session’s the price of bonds have shot up. This tells me panic selling in the stocks market has starting and that generally means we are nearing and tradable bottom for stocks…..
Bonds are a safe haven for investors when fear is running high. The past couple trading session’s the price of bonds have shot up. This tells me panic selling in the stocks market has starting and that generally means we are nearing and tradable bottom for stocks…..
Gold Futures 4 Hour Chart:
Gold is the other safe haven. Here again we see money flow into gold at a very quick pace….We will need to see some resolutions in Euro land before gold will trade lower or sideways, but until then I think scared money is going to keep rolling into gold.
Gold is the other safe haven. Here again we see money flow into gold at a very quick pace….We will need to see some resolutions in Euro land before gold will trade lower or sideways, but until then I think scared money is going to keep rolling into gold.
Crude Oil Futures 4 Hour Chart:
Oil has drifted its way up into a resistance level as of late last week only to find overhead supply. Once the selling started oil slid lower at a steady rate all the way back down to a short term support zone. Now we are waiting to see if it will make a double bottom at $79 or bounce here
Oil has drifted its way up into a resistance level as of late last week only to find overhead supply. Once the selling started oil slid lower at a steady rate all the way back down to a short term support zone. Now we are waiting to see if it will make a double bottom at $79 or bounce here
Weekend Trading Conclusion:
In short, Tuesday will be a volatile session judging from today’s sharp price action. Fear is driving prices at the moment and until everyone panics out of stock positions and dumps their money into the save havens we will not see a bottom form. Generally this takes 2-5 days to play out but time will tell.
I hope this quick Labor Day update helps get you back on track for trading this week.
Consider joining me at The Gold and Oil Guy for ETF trade ideas on the SP500, Oil, Gold, and Silver with great accuracy. Check it out at The Gold and Oil Guy.Com
Consider joining me at The Gold and Oil Guy for ETF trade ideas on the SP500, Oil, Gold, and Silver with great accuracy. Check it out at The Gold and Oil Guy.Com
Labels:
Chris Vermeulen,
Crude Oil,
Dollar,
equities,
SP 500
Sunday, September 4, 2011
Do You Really Know How To Trade Ticker USO?
Markets are closed so let's talk shop. Here is a great article from our friends at Wolf Option Trading. Let's see how they trade the USO contango and how to partially offset it.......
The United States Oil ETF, LP (USO) is a twin of The United States Natural Gas ETF, LP (UNG), a futures based ETF that encounters issues with contango. If you are investing in futures based ETFs you should already be familiar with the issue and know how it impacts the funds. Thereby, I am not going to go into great detail about the pitfalls, but simply talk about it briefly.
USO owns crude at $85 and by this time next year the futures are pricing crude at $90 or roughly 6%. If all remains the same, this means that anyone buying USO today will not make money and instead lose money, if oil stays below $90. A year of losing money unless prices go up by more than 6% is never fun.
The bright side of this dark oily substance has many folds. Since oil is denominated in US dollars, you have traders that use it as a dollar hedge trade, bad for oil prices going up when a flight to safety is occuring. However, the world will not always live in fear and when it stops, then the trades get reversed and oil and USO then will go up. Oil has many more types of traders (aside from actual fundamental supply/demand folks) such as inflation hedgers, gold/oil ratio folks, oil/natural gas ratio folks, brent/wti ratio folks and a good amount more I am probably neglecting to mention. Fundamentally, the case for higher oil prices is strong and only further economic weakness would cause prices to go substantially lower.
It is likely oil prices will be much higher in the future than $85, but for folks buying USO they have to factor in the amount of contango they will face in order to see if it is a wise time to buy and hold currently. My take is that is probably early to buy crude at $85 and speculate that it will be above $90 by this time next year. There could be a better entry for a buy and hold investor.
However, everyone always has that itch to be more aggressive or look for more bullish things than may exist. I am not immune and it takes a lot of self discipline to be more strategic and wait for better opportunities.
The only easy way to partially offset contango is by being a net seller of options. Many options strategies are available that allow you to be a net seller of options while being bullish on the underlying instrument. Probably the most attractive strategy in my opinion is selling puts greater than 5% OTM and buying an ATM call spread.
For USO, January 2013 options are the only ones available to express a view past April 2012. January 2013 $25 put options are roughly 32% OTM but fetch a net credit of $2.45. The $34-45 January 2013 call spreads would cost $3.49. A net debit of $1.04.
The trade essentially would get you bullish on oil at $57 without factoring in contango. However, if one assumes that contango would be 15% (random) then one would be long oil at $70. The call spread gives one upside in oil prices up to $115 before getting called away from the trade if there was no contango. If one were to factor in a 15% contango rate, then oil prices would have to be $132 to get called away.
Total profits on the trade would be very high if one were to get called away at $45. The returns against total cash involved in the trade would be $9.96 net profits against a $1.04 net debit. However, that can be deceiving as margin requirements would be higher than the net debit but those vary across brokerage firms. The MVAR would be the better calculation and that would be the cost average one would be assigned USO at. $26.05 is the cost average of the total trade ($1.04 net debit added onto the $25 short puts) and a $9.96 net profit / $26.05 would still get one a 38.24%.
Overall, the trade is a good one for people speculating on much higher oil prices than $85 in a year's time, yet doesn't force one to take on shares at current prices.
Posted courtesy of Wolf Option Trading
Disclosure: The author does not have positions in any stocks mentioned, but may initiate a long position in USO over the next 72 hours.
The United States Oil ETF, LP (USO) is a twin of The United States Natural Gas ETF, LP (UNG), a futures based ETF that encounters issues with contango. If you are investing in futures based ETFs you should already be familiar with the issue and know how it impacts the funds. Thereby, I am not going to go into great detail about the pitfalls, but simply talk about it briefly.
USO owns crude at $85 and by this time next year the futures are pricing crude at $90 or roughly 6%. If all remains the same, this means that anyone buying USO today will not make money and instead lose money, if oil stays below $90. A year of losing money unless prices go up by more than 6% is never fun.
The bright side of this dark oily substance has many folds. Since oil is denominated in US dollars, you have traders that use it as a dollar hedge trade, bad for oil prices going up when a flight to safety is occuring. However, the world will not always live in fear and when it stops, then the trades get reversed and oil and USO then will go up. Oil has many more types of traders (aside from actual fundamental supply/demand folks) such as inflation hedgers, gold/oil ratio folks, oil/natural gas ratio folks, brent/wti ratio folks and a good amount more I am probably neglecting to mention. Fundamentally, the case for higher oil prices is strong and only further economic weakness would cause prices to go substantially lower.
It is likely oil prices will be much higher in the future than $85, but for folks buying USO they have to factor in the amount of contango they will face in order to see if it is a wise time to buy and hold currently. My take is that is probably early to buy crude at $85 and speculate that it will be above $90 by this time next year. There could be a better entry for a buy and hold investor.
However, everyone always has that itch to be more aggressive or look for more bullish things than may exist. I am not immune and it takes a lot of self discipline to be more strategic and wait for better opportunities.
The only easy way to partially offset contango is by being a net seller of options. Many options strategies are available that allow you to be a net seller of options while being bullish on the underlying instrument. Probably the most attractive strategy in my opinion is selling puts greater than 5% OTM and buying an ATM call spread.
For USO, January 2013 options are the only ones available to express a view past April 2012. January 2013 $25 put options are roughly 32% OTM but fetch a net credit of $2.45. The $34-45 January 2013 call spreads would cost $3.49. A net debit of $1.04.
The trade essentially would get you bullish on oil at $57 without factoring in contango. However, if one assumes that contango would be 15% (random) then one would be long oil at $70. The call spread gives one upside in oil prices up to $115 before getting called away from the trade if there was no contango. If one were to factor in a 15% contango rate, then oil prices would have to be $132 to get called away.
Total profits on the trade would be very high if one were to get called away at $45. The returns against total cash involved in the trade would be $9.96 net profits against a $1.04 net debit. However, that can be deceiving as margin requirements would be higher than the net debit but those vary across brokerage firms. The MVAR would be the better calculation and that would be the cost average one would be assigned USO at. $26.05 is the cost average of the total trade ($1.04 net debit added onto the $25 short puts) and a $9.96 net profit / $26.05 would still get one a 38.24%.
Overall, the trade is a good one for people speculating on much higher oil prices than $85 in a year's time, yet doesn't force one to take on shares at current prices.
Posted courtesy of Wolf Option Trading
Disclosure: The author does not have positions in any stocks mentioned, but may initiate a long position in USO over the next 72 hours.
Labels:
Crude Oil,
Dollar,
UNG,
USO,
Wolf Option Trading
J.W. Jones: Labor Day Special
If you are a regular reader here and have followed the amazing trades made in 2011 by our affiliate J.W. Jones, then it might be time to take him up on this Labor Special. Sign up now and get 3 months for the price of 1 with JW's options trading newsletter. And see for yourself how you can profit from his service!
JW's Options Trading Signals service provides Directional Based Trades, Time Decay Trades, and Earnings Based Trade alerts on ETFs and leading component stocks. He begins each session with a pre-market look at macroeconomic trends & indicators, plus overnight/pre-market chart analysis of the S&P 500, Bonds, Precious Metals and Oil using futures contracts.
For the ETF & stock trades, JW drills down to identify sectors and leading sector components likely to react most to a given trend, news event due out and or volatility levels. He then enlists a combination of pattern recognition and momentum indicators to pick winning option combinations.
Just click here and sign up today!
JW's Options Trading Signals service provides Directional Based Trades, Time Decay Trades, and Earnings Based Trade alerts on ETFs and leading component stocks. He begins each session with a pre-market look at macroeconomic trends & indicators, plus overnight/pre-market chart analysis of the S&P 500, Bonds, Precious Metals and Oil using futures contracts.
For the ETF & stock trades, JW drills down to identify sectors and leading sector components likely to react most to a given trend, news event due out and or volatility levels. He then enlists a combination of pattern recognition and momentum indicators to pick winning option combinations.
Just click here and sign up today!
Labels:
etf,
J.W. Jones,
momentum,
options,
SP 500
Saturday, September 3, 2011
You ARE a Hedge Fund Manager.....So What Are The Most Successful Managers Buying?
Sometimes we don't see it, but every one of you reading this that have taken the step to manage your own money, your own fund....you are a hedge fund manager [you are hedging, aren't you?]. And like any business, yes you are in business to make yourself money, you should look at what your peers are buying.
Two of my favorite sites are Insider Monkey and Guru Focus. How can you even think about adding crude oil and energy stocks to your portfolio without looking at what the most successful people in our industry are buying.
I will let you do your own research, but I have been surprised at some of the small american producers that are showing up in the portfolios of the "great oil minds". Names like Plains Exploration and Production Company, ticker PXP, Sandridge Energy ticker SD, Murphy Oil Corp. ticker MUR and Gastar Exploration ticker GST. Gastar? A small company that just received permits to drill in Utah and should producing oil by October.
Markets are closed and it's a slow news period for the Labor Day weekend so take some time and see what these guys are buying.
Two of my favorite sites are Insider Monkey and Guru Focus. How can you even think about adding crude oil and energy stocks to your portfolio without looking at what the most successful people in our industry are buying.
I will let you do your own research, but I have been surprised at some of the small american producers that are showing up in the portfolios of the "great oil minds". Names like Plains Exploration and Production Company, ticker PXP, Sandridge Energy ticker SD, Murphy Oil Corp. ticker MUR and Gastar Exploration ticker GST. Gastar? A small company that just received permits to drill in Utah and should producing oil by October.
Markets are closed and it's a slow news period for the Labor Day weekend so take some time and see what these guys are buying.
Friday, September 2, 2011
Traders Always Let Us Know Where They Stand Before a Long Weekend...And it Doesn't Look Good!
The crude oil bears have a renewed advantage as bad news in employment numbers as well as a fresh round of "goal post moving" from Washington creates global investment anxiety. Falling the most it has in two weeks.
Crude oil closed lower on Friday due to the bad news and profit taking as it consolidates some of the rally off August's low. The low range close sets the stage for a steady to lower opening on Tuesday. Make sure you know when the world is trading as this is a holiday weekend. Check out our post Labor Day CME Hours so you won't get tripped up.
The oil companies themselves will not be taking a holiday weekend as Tropical Storm Lee has producers working around the clock to secure platforms, rigs and personal in the Gulf of Mexico. If the storm lives up to predictions it could limit product flow out of the gulf to 50% of normal production. And oil prices still fell today?
Stochastics and the RSI remain overbought and closes above the reaction high crossing at 89.19 are needed to confirm that a low has been posted. If October renews this summer's decline, the 75% retracement level of the 2009-2011 rally crossing at 71.72 is the next downside target.
First resistance is Thursday's high crossing at 89.90. Second resistance is the May-July downtrend line crossing near 93.88. First support is the 20 day moving average crossing at 85.51. Second support is August's low crossing at 76.15.
Crude oil closed lower on Friday due to the bad news and profit taking as it consolidates some of the rally off August's low. The low range close sets the stage for a steady to lower opening on Tuesday. Make sure you know when the world is trading as this is a holiday weekend. Check out our post Labor Day CME Hours so you won't get tripped up.
The oil companies themselves will not be taking a holiday weekend as Tropical Storm Lee has producers working around the clock to secure platforms, rigs and personal in the Gulf of Mexico. If the storm lives up to predictions it could limit product flow out of the gulf to 50% of normal production. And oil prices still fell today?
Stochastics and the RSI remain overbought and closes above the reaction high crossing at 89.19 are needed to confirm that a low has been posted. If October renews this summer's decline, the 75% retracement level of the 2009-2011 rally crossing at 71.72 is the next downside target.
First resistance is Thursday's high crossing at 89.90. Second resistance is the May-July downtrend line crossing near 93.88. First support is the 20 day moving average crossing at 85.51. Second support is August's low crossing at 76.15.
Labels:
CME,
Crude Oil,
resistance,
RSI,
Stochastics
Labor Day CME Hours
The CME stock indexes close at 10:30 a.m. CST on Monday, September 5, 2010. If you intend on daytrading please make sure you are flat before this close as the market does not open up again until Tuesday night at 5 p.m. CST!
Here is a link for the upcoming CME holiday hours
Be very careful and aware of early closes. Every holiday we talk to experienced traders that get stuck in trades because they did not pay close enough attention to the CME holiday hours. And again, if you are using daytrade margins please make sure you are flat at the early close time.
Here is a link for the upcoming CME holiday hours
Be very careful and aware of early closes. Every holiday we talk to experienced traders that get stuck in trades because they did not pay close enough attention to the CME holiday hours. And again, if you are using daytrade margins please make sure you are flat at the early close time.
Labels:
Chicago Mercantile Exchange,
CME,
holiday,
trading
Weak Unemployment Numbers Drive Markets Lower
Crude oil was lower due to profit taking in overnight trading as it consolidates some of this week's rally. Of course disappointing unemployment numbers have contributed to commodities and equities falling hard in early Friday trading.
Thursday trading formed a temporary top at 89.54 with the 4 hour MACD crossed below signal line. Of course the crude oil bears are thrilled with 89.61 support turned resistance remaining intact, and Friday mornings sharp decline [-3.39 as we go to press] is all the prove we need. We will remain bearish.
Closes above the reaction high crossing at 89.61 are needed to confirm that a short term low has been posted. Closes below the 20 day moving average crossing at 85.58 would signal that a short term top has been posted. If October renews the decline off May's high, the 75% retracement level of the 2009-2011 rally crossing at 71.73 is the next downside target.
First resistance is Thursday's high crossing at 89.54. Second resistance is the May-July downtrend line crossing near 93.95. First support is the 20 day moving average crossing at 85.58. Second support is the reaction low crossing at 82.95. Crude oil pivot point for Fridays trading is 89.01.
Thursday trading formed a temporary top at 89.54 with the 4 hour MACD crossed below signal line. Of course the crude oil bears are thrilled with 89.61 support turned resistance remaining intact, and Friday mornings sharp decline [-3.39 as we go to press] is all the prove we need. We will remain bearish.
Closes above the reaction high crossing at 89.61 are needed to confirm that a short term low has been posted. Closes below the 20 day moving average crossing at 85.58 would signal that a short term top has been posted. If October renews the decline off May's high, the 75% retracement level of the 2009-2011 rally crossing at 71.73 is the next downside target.
First resistance is Thursday's high crossing at 89.54. Second resistance is the May-July downtrend line crossing near 93.95. First support is the 20 day moving average crossing at 85.58. Second support is the reaction low crossing at 82.95. Crude oil pivot point for Fridays trading is 89.01.
Labels:
bearish,
Crude Oil,
downside,
unemployment
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