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James Mound's Weekend Commodities Review


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The Weekend Commodities Review

By Head Analyst James Mound

 For the Week Ending June 28th, 2009

Energies

On a technical level crude oil's choppiness from this week makes this a very difficult short term trading period.  The support occurred above the June 3rd low and sets up a potential bull pennant, but the gut says don't buy the support.  The market is likely to break the low from this week and head towards $63, bringing the energy sector as a whole down about 5-10% over the next several weeks.  The root of the lower price forecast comes from three critical areas: a strong dollar, rising distillate inventories and a lack of hurricane activity early in the season.  Rainy weather has hurt travel as well. 

Financials      

The stock market threatens a possible crash but holds on through bad news - sounds very familiar.  This market is still showing two steps forward and one step back, and until there is a thorough downside move I recommend buying the dips.  Bonds appear to have levelled off and are offering premium collection opportunities in the short term as it channels.  The Fed is stuck and so are interest rates.  The dollar continues to be a buy with shorts recommended on the euro, pound, Canadian dollar and peso.  The yen is avoidable until it breaks the lows.

Grains

Time to fade the bean rally again.  I recommend an inter-market spread with 1 short bean, 1 short bean meal, 2 long wheat and 2 long corn.  The charts show corn and wheat plunging and a supportive bean market, but this time of year screams choppy market ahead.  Strong support in corn exists above the March 6th low and the same goes for wheat on March 3rd.  Rice remains avoidable.  Grain stocks and acreage report on Tuesday should shift momentum in wheat and corn.

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Meats            

Time to yank the long recommendation on cattle even if there is still some additional potential upside.  Hogs remain a sell with more downside ahead.

Metals        

As if gold didn't have a enough reasons to selloff with a resumption of the dollar rally and strong technical resistance below the contract highs, now the IMF is about to unload 400+ tonnes of gold onto the market.  You can argue the IMF gold will not be directly sold on the open market, which may have some truth, but the reality is supply is supply is supply.  Silver has little reason to stay up here at these prices despite a disproportionate drop in prices when compared to gold.  Copper remains a sell along with platinum.  Palladium is a strong buy on a break above 270.

Softs               

Coffee is a value buy between 112 and 119.  Worse than anticipated supply from Columbia should help to create a base here despite dollar strength.  Sugar is continuing to surge as India supplies are drastically lower than recent years and possibly just slightly more than half of last year's crop.  Cocoa should continue to collapse as sellers jump on a rising dollar and an end to the Ivory Coast strike.  Wet weather there may create some temporary support.  Cotton is a buy on dips.  OJ is a value buy with November calls.  Lumber is on target for a move to 250 and possibly up to 270 in coming months.

Right-click here to download pictures. To help protect your privacy, Outlook prevented automatic download of this picture from the Internet. 06-28-2009

**Chart courtesy of Gecko Software's TracknTrade

 

 

 

 

*Disclaimer: There is risk of loss in all commodities trading. Please consult a James Mound Trading Group Broker before you trade for the first time. Losses can exceed your account size and/or margin requirements. Commodities trading can be extremely risky and is not for everyone. Some option strategies have unlimited risk. Educate yourself on the risks and rewards of such investing prior to trading. James Mound Trading Group, or anyone associated with JMTG or moundreport.com, do not guarantee profits or pre-determined loss points, and are not held monetarily responsible for the trading losses of others (clients or otherwise). Past results are by no means indicative of potential future returns. Information provided is compiled by sources believed to be reliable. JMTG or its principals assume no responsibility for any errors or omissions as the information may not be complete or events may have been cancelled or rescheduled. Any copy, reprint, broadcast or distribution of this report of any kind is prohibited without the express written consent of James Mound Trading Group LLC. Total cost, or cost/credit of trade (as referred to in the trade above), includes the cost/credit of entry, commissions and fees. Typical commission is an approximate mean of commission rates amongst JMTG customers, but can be more or less depending upon the individual account/customer, services rendered, account size, trading volume, etc. Options do not necessarily move in lock step with the underlying futures movement. Commissions at JMTG range from $3 to $27.50 per side depending upon the market traded and specific commission rate charged to the client. Fees range from $2.88 to $7.50 per side depending upon the market traded.



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About the author


James Mound is currently the President of James Mound Trading Group LLC and head analyst for MoundReport.com.
  • Previously the head trader and partner of PGA Futures, Inc.
  • Has been published over 1,000 times (online and printed media)
  • Author of the book, "7 Secrets Every Commodity Trader Needs to Know", published by Traders Press, Inc.
  • Quoted/Published in Time Magazine, SmartMoney, Consensus Inc. Newspaper, Futures Magazine, 321Gold.com, Gold-eagle.com, Pitnews.com, Reuters, TradersWorld Magazine, ETVFutures.com and many more.
  • Currently authors the Weekend Commodities Review distributed to thousands of commodity enthusiasts each week and published on over 20 commodity information websites.
  • Member of the National Futures Association

 

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