The FTSE, Tuesday 23rd May 2006
Monday's results:
Close: 5532, down 124pts [2.20%]
Range: 5657 - 5532.
Last 5 TD: down 5.36%.
OTM: -8.36%.
Monday's DOW:
11125, down 18pts [0.17%].
Last 5 TD: down 2.67%.
OTM: -2.10%
Thursday's S&P 500
1262.06 down 4.97 [0.39%].
Last 5 TD: down 2.52%.
OTM: -3.73%.
News items of note:
Metal prices slump further
(Filed: 22/05/2006) Telegraph
Copper, aluminum and silver prices in Asia fell as much as 4pc, and gold slipped 2.2pc, on speculation that a rally in the metals has ended as investors deemed their rise to levels not seen for decades was overdone.
Copper stockpiles rose by almost a fifth last week to a 12 week high and aluminum inventories gained 1.6pc, the Shanghai Futures Exchange said May 19. Commodity prices tracked by the Reuters/Jefferies CRB Futures Price Index tumbled 6.4 percent last week, the biggest drop since 1980.
Nicholas Chung, a general manager at Tong Yang Futures Trading's international business team, said: "The consensus is that the bubble has burst." Chung had expected spot gold to plunge from $657.60 an ounce on May 19 to $650 today. It dropped as low as $642.90.
Charts, and nothing but the charts: Monday's predicted a rise. Tuesday's a rise.
The PoM System: +1.25, interpretation: a rise.
The PoM system is a mathematical formula that determines the markets direction. A plus or minus indicates the likelihood and strength of the market going up or down.
Companies reporting:
British Land & Co
Kazakhmys
Marks and Spencer
Yell
Economic Data:
None.
Areas to watch: Oil copper and miners. As per Monday, all are expected to drop further and again copper the most.
The FTSE tomorrow based on present news and data: well that's this years gains and then some wiped off the board. The big sell off continues. Charts and PoM agree with a small chance of a rise; companies reporting will have little and no effect on the market; the American markets poor attempt to finish the day in positive territory will only add a negative sentiment to the FTSE's early morning behaviour. Expect the FTSE to continue its daily see-saw action, and South rather then North.
Early gut feeling: a rise.
Will I bet? Still sitting on the fence.
If you are betting: make your own decision, watch the markets open and do read the news for clues as to which way the FTSE may go.
Yours
UK