#C-SOYB: Soybeans Commodities Technical Analysis July 06, 2016

July 6, 2016

By IFCMarkets

Soy prices slumped on Tuesday amid improved outlook for crops in US and Brazil and mixed data in China. Soy fell less than 10% from its multi-month high reached in first half of June. Meanwhile the corn and wheat prices tumbled more than 20% while rice lost around 15%. Will the soy continue falling in price?

US Middle West suffers from rains after a spell of hot and dry weather and it may support grain crops. About 20% of crops still suffer from drought. Some market participants assume prices may fall further in case of rains in South-Eastern part of Iowa and Western Illinois. The price of corn and wheat fell to the lowest since 2006 in US Chicago Board of Trade. This could have happened on lower demand on biofuel amid cheap oil in global markets. Soy planting acreage may gain 3.5% to 34.3mln hectares in Brazil in this agricultural season. Meanwhile its crops are to reach 100mln tonnes and surpass the last-year level of 95.6mln tonnes. This June Brazil has cut soy exports by around 2mln tonnes compared to May and June 2015 which supported the prices. China is the world leading soy importer and accounts for around 64% of global soy imports followed by Japan and Mexico. The slowdown of the Chinese economy may cut demand for alimentary and commodities. The Chinese economic data came out mixed on Tuesday. As a result, some market participants began to doubt the monetary stimulus by the People’s Bank of China is effective enough. The Services PMI by Caixin/Markit rose in June 2016 to the 11-month high while the similar composite index which includes industrial production slumped to the 4-month low. The official June manufacturing production data will come out in China on July 15, they may be below the tentative outlook.

Soyb

On the daily chart Soyb: D1 showed on Tuesday the record daily fall in 11 month having left the mid-term bullish trend. But it is still far from the year low. The MACD and Parabolic indicators have formed signals to sell. The Bollinger bands have narrowed which means lower volatility. The RSI is below 50 but has not yet reached the overbought zone. No divergence. The bearish momentum may develop in case the soy price falls below the last fractal low and the Parabolic signal at 1073. This level may serve the point of entry. The initial stop-loss may be placed above the Parabolic signal, the last fractal high and the line of the recently formed downtrend at 1160. Having opened the pending order we shall move the stop to the next fractal high following the Parabolic and Bollinger signals. Thus, we are changing the probable profit/loss ratio to the breakeven point. The most risk-averse traders may switch to the 4-hour chart after the trade and place there a stop-loss moving it in the direction of the trade. If the price meets the stop-loss level at 1160 without reaching the order at 1073, we recommend cancelling the position: the market sustains internal changes which were not taken into account.

PositionSell
Sell stopbelow 1073
Stop lossabove 1160

Market Analysis provided by IFCMarkets