The panic narrative is returning to the stock markets. The focus today is on a non-farm report

By JustForex

The US 10-year bond yields rose nearly 10 basis points to 3.85% after Minneapolis Fed President Neel Kashkari said yesterday that the central bank is “very far” from suspending its tightening campaign. Kashkari’s comments followed a series of hawkish remarks from other officials. Federal Reserve Bank of Chicago President Charles Evans said Thursday that the US Central Bank’s discount rate is likely to reach 4.5-4.75% by the spring of 2023 as the Fed increases the cost of borrowing to reduce too much inflation. A day earlier, San Francisco Federal Reserve President Mary Daly said that investors are wrong to anticipate monetary policy easing in 2023. Such hawkish rhetoric brought negativity back to the financial markets, which triggered some sell-off in stocks.

At the close of the stock market yesterday, the Dow Jones Index (US30) decreased by 1.15%, and the S&P 500 Index (US500) fell by 1.30%. Tech Index NASDAQ (US100) closed the day down by 0.35%. At the Fed meeting in November, money markets are pricing in a more than 85% chance of a fourth straight 75 basis point rate hike.

Today, the main focus for investors will be on the US labor market data. If the report turns negative, it could trigger a drop in the dollar index and a rise in stock indices on expectations that the US Federal Reserve will be less aggressive in tightening monetary policy further. But if the non-farm payrolls report is positive and shows the strength of the labor market, the opposite reaction could follow a sell-off in the stock market plus an increase in the dollar index and treasury yields. Weekly labor market data showed that the number of Americans filing new jobless claims rose more than expected last week, but the labor market remains strong even as demand declines amid higher interest rates.

Stock markets in Europe were mostly down yesterday. German DAX (DE30) decreased by 0.37%, French CAC 40 (FR40) fell by 0.82%, Spanish IBEX 35 (ES35) lost 0.92%, British FTSE 100 (UK100) closed down by 0.78%.

The report on the ECB’s September 7-8 monetary policy meeting released yesterday showed that an absolute majority approved a 75 basis point rate hike of the Governing Council. The report also indicated that in the medium term, a 50 basis point hike would be part of a sustainable path toward more neutral rate levels, and such a dynamic would be sufficient to alleviate inflationary pressures and not “drop” the economy deep into recession. But all inflation forecasts for 2023 and 2024 have been revised upward.

In August 2022, seasonally adjusted retail sales were down by 0.3% in the Eurozone. Retail sales also declined by 0.4% in July. This is negative data, which indirectly points to high inflationary pressures.

Oil prices rose about 1% on Thursday, holding at a three-week high after OPEC+ agreed to cut global supply by 2 million BPD, the biggest cut since 2020. Saudi Arabia’s energy minister said the real supply cut would be 1 million to 1.1 million BPD. Experts believe that such a move by OPEC+ will not only boost oil prices but also cause a new round of unwinding inflation, which central banks around the world are actively fighting.

Asian markets traded flat yesterday. Japan’s Nikkei 225 (JP225) gained 0.70%, Hong Kong’s Hang Seng (HK50) decreased by 0.42%, and Australia’s S&P/ASX 200 (AU200) ended the day up by 0.03%.

A report released Thursday by the Bank of Japan (BOJ) indicates that most regional economies in Japan are seeing a moderate rebound, with some firms considering wage increases, stressing the hope that household incomes will rise enough to offset rising costs of living.

OPEC+ will no longer meet monthly. Meetings will now be held every two months.

S&P 500 (F) (US500) 3,744.40 −38.88 (−0.20%)

Dow Jones (US30) 29,926.47 −347.40 (−1.15%)

DAX (DE40) 12,470.78  −46.40 (−1.21%)

FTSE 100 (UK100) 6,997.27 −55.35 (−0.78)

USD Index 112.22 +1.14 (+1.02%)

Important events for today:
  • – US FOMC Member Waller Speaks (m/m) at 00:00 (GMT+3);
  • – US FOMC Member Mester Speaks (m/m) at 01:30 (GMT+3);
  • – German Industrial Production (m/m) at 09:00 (GMT+3);
  • – US Nonfarm Payrolls (m/m) at 15:30 (GMT+3);
  • – US Unemployment Rate (m/m) at 15:30 (GMT+3);
  • – Canada Unemployment Rate (m/m) at 15:30 (GMT+3);
  • – US FOMC Member Williams Speaks (m/m) at 17:00 (GMT+3).

By JustForex

 

This article reflects a personal opinion and should not be interpreted as an investment advice, and/or offer, and/or a persistent request for carrying out financial transactions, and/or a guarantee, and/or a forecast of future events.

EUR Under Pressure Again

By RoboForex Analytical Department

Early in another week of October, the major currency pair is falling. At the moment, EUR/USD is balancing around 0.9720.

Global capital markets are trying to escape risks amid recession concerns and this fact makes the “greenback” attractive again. On the other hand, the Euro is getting a huge hit from external economic stress – the upcoming heating season in Europe and many problems around it.

Last Friday’s statistics on the US labour market in September turned out to be better than expected. As a result, the US FOMC has a good reason to continue tightening its monetary policy – the employment sector is stable.

The Unemployment Rate dropped from 3.7% in August to 3.5% in September, while the Non-Farm Payrolls shoed 263K against the expected reading of 248K.

In the H4 chart, after rebounding from 0.9990, EUR/USD is forming a new descending wave towards 0.9360; right now, it is forming the first structure of this wave with the predicted target at 0.9680 and may later consolidate there. In the future, the asset may break the range to the downside and resume falling to reach 0.9360. From the technical point of view, this scenario is confirmed by MACD Oscillator: having broken 0 downwards, its signal line continues falling to update the lows.

As we can see in the H1 chart, having finished the descending structure at 0.9815 and forming a new consolidation range there, EUR/USD has broken it downwards; right now, it is still falling and forming another descending structure towards 0.9700. After that, the instrument may start a new correction to test 0.9815 from below and then resume falling with the target at 0.9630. From the technical point of view, this idea is confirmed by the Stochastic Oscillator: its signal line is falling towards 20.

Disclaimer

Any forecasts contained herein are based on the author’s particular opinion. This analysis may not be treated as trading advice. RoboForex bears no responsibility for trading results based on trading recommendations and reviews contained herein.

Trade Of The Week: Are Gold Bears Back In Town?

By ForexTime 

– The past few days have been rocky for gold.

After briefly punching above the 50-day Simple Moving Average early last week, bear hijacked the driving seat as multiple fundamental forces dimmed the metal’s allure. Despite gaining over 1% since the start of October, prices are back below the psychological $1700 level with the path of least resistance pointing south.

Last Friday’s strong US jobs numbers coupled with hawkish speeches by Fed officials made life hard for zero-yielding gold with rising Treasury yields adding insult to injury.

The US economy added 263,000 new jobs in September, beating market expectations of 250,000. Despite the marginal beat, the figure raised concerns that the US labour market may be starting to cool. Nevertheless, market expectations remain elevated over the Federal Reserve unleashing more monetary bazookas against the inflation menace.

With the greenback drawing fresh strength from the US jobs report and rising Treasury yields, gold could be exposed to fresh downside risks.

The low down…

It has been a rough year for gold.

The precious metal is down over 8% year-to-date thanks to an appreciating dollar, rising Treasury yields, and expectations for aggressive interest rates enforced by central banks. Although geopolitical risks, periods of dollar weakness and global growth concerns have somewhat limited downside losses – bears are currently winning this war. According to Bloomberg, traders are pricing in a 92% of a 75-basis point rate hike at the next FOMC meeting in November. If such becomes reality, gold could be instore for more pain as 2022 slowly comes to an end.

Taking a brief look at the monthly chart, every single monthly candle has closed negative since April 2022.

The week ahead…

It may be wise to fasten your seatbelts because the next few days promise to be eventful for gold. Investors will be served a platter of key economic reports and speeches from numerous financial heavyweights. To top things up, all eyes will be on the latest US inflation which is arguably now the biggest data point on the risk calendar.

Thursday sees the release of the US inflation report with investors watching to see if prices are rising again or perhaps if we are finally peaking. According to Bloomberg, the headline print for September is expected to drop 8.1% from 8.3% while the core is expected to jump 6.5% from the shock of 6.3% in August. A higher-than-expected CPI figure may reinforce expectations around the Fed unleashing more monetary bazookas to tame the inflation beast. This could see gold prices tumble lower as the dollar and Treasury yields rise. Alternatively, a lower-than-expected inflation report could reduce rate hike bets and feed the “dovish pivot” narrative – ultimately providing room for gold bulls to fight back.

Gold ETFs favour bears

According to an automated report from Bloomberg, gold ETFs cut 95,021 troy ounces of gold from their holdings last Friday, bringing this year’s net sales to 1.01 million ounces. This was the fourth straight day of declines.

The outflows may be the result of last Friday’s strong jobs data which bolstered bets over the Fed moving ahead with a 75-basis point rate hike next month. It’s worth keeping in mind that a gold ETF provides investors exposure to the precious metal without owning the physical asset. Outflows from ETFs are generally seen as bearish for the underlying asset.

Gold ready for a steep selloff?

Gold remains dominated by bears on the daily and weekly timeframes. After breaking back below $1700, this could open doors towards $1655, $1615, and $1600. Given how the precious metal remains in a fierce battle against a stronger dollar and aggressive rate hike bets among other themes, bears remain in control. The pending inflation report may set the tone for gold for the rest of this month. Should prices push back above $1700, this could open a path back toward $1724, $1752, and $1770.


Forex-Time-LogoArticle by ForexTime

ForexTime Ltd (FXTM) is an award winning international online forex broker regulated by CySEC 185/12 www.forextime.com

Expert Shares Three Stocks He Believes Are of ‘Great Value’

Source: Ron Struthers  (10/7/22)

Expert Ron Struthers believes TC Energy is a well-run pipeline company as it is yielding about 6.5% and has increased its dividend every year since the turn of the century. He also discusses how oil tanker rates are soaring as the market tightens more with the Ukraine war, but DHT Holdings is a laggard worth a look.

Has gold bottomed? It is possible, but it appears today it is retreating from its resistance area. We need a solid break above $1740 for more proof the bottom is in, which would also break the downtrend.

A good thing we got stopped out of most of our gold stocks in June. Near term, I believe there is more potential in the energy sector, where I have been making most of my new picks this year and two more below.

There is renewed interest in GICs and term deposits at the banks now that interest rates have gone up. A person can get 4% to 5% by locking into three to five year terms. Rates vary by type and bank, but that is a good ballpark number.

While this is a safe investment, the downfall is your money is tied up, and there is no chance of getting a higher rate or making a capital gain.

A better alternative is TC Energy Corp. (TRP:NYSE).

TC Energy Corp.

TC Energy offers more potential than GICs, with comparatively small risks. At CA$55.75 and an annual payout of $3.60, TC Energy yields 6.5%.

TC Energy owns and operates 93,300 kilometers of natural gas pipelines and 653 billion cubic feet of storage space in Canada, the United States, and Mexico. It also has a 4,900km network of oil pipelines, which supply Alberta crude to the U.S. market.

It also invests in several power-generation facilities, including wind, solar and nuclear. The current quarterly dividend is $0.90 per share. The company has raised its payout every year since the turn of the century.

The company is projecting 5% annual growth, and I see no reason why dividends will not keep increasing. Second-quarter results came in slightly ahead of analysts’ expectations.

Net income attributable to shareholders was $889 million ($0.90 per share), compared with $975 million ($1 per share) in the same period of 2021.

For the first six months of the fiscal year, net income was $1.24 billion ($1.27 a share). In the same period of the prior year, the company reported a loss of $82 million.

TC Energy announced a major expansion into Mexico on August 4, 2022. TC Energy and Mexico’s state-owned electricity producer Comision Federal de Electricidad (CFE) announced the launch of a $4.5 billion pipeline that will deliver natural gas from the southwestern U.S. to southern Mexico.

TC Energy said the CFE’s decision to take a 15% share in the project — the 715-kilometer offshore Southeast Gateway pipeline — is a landmark transaction for the Mexican utility as its first public-private partnership.

The Southeast Gateway pipeline is expected to be operational by 2025, and TC Energy said the project enjoys broad-based support from all levels of government, environmentalists, and regulators.

The project will allow the CFE to replace power plants currently fuelled by high-sulfur oil with natural gas-fired facilities that produce half the greenhouse-gas emissions. Over the course of this decade, Mexico’s appetite for natural gas is expected to increase by 50%.

TC Energy is also expanding into what I see as a high-growth market with strong future growth, exporting Liquid Natural Gas (LNG). Their $40-billion LNG Canada project will have an export terminal in Kitimat, B.C., at the end of TC Energy’s Coastal GasLink pipeline and aims to be up and running by 2025.

This next graphic is from TC Energy’s presentation

In March this year, TC Energy announced the signing of option agreements to sell a 10% equity interest in the Coastal GasLink Pipeline Limited Partnership to Indigenous communities across the project corridor.

The opportunity to become business partners through equity ownership was made available to all 20 Nations holding existing agreements with Coastal GasLink.

The formal establishment of these agreements comes from an interest expressed by Indigenous groups across the project corridor to become owners in Coastal GasLink alongside Alberta Investment Management Corporation, KKR, and TC Energy.

The next graphic from their presentation illustrates that TC Energy is already benefiting from the LNG boom and will continue to do so and especially with its own Kitimat terminal in 2025.

The stock has dropped to the lowest level in almost two years, simply correcting too far in sympathy with oil stocks.

It does not matter the price of oil and gas; TC Energy is paid to move it at whatever price. The stock is of great value here.

Atlas Corp.

With Atlas Corp. (ATCO:NYSE), we are sitting on a big gain from our $7.33 Buy price, and there currently is a cash offer of $15.50 per share to take Atlas private.

Assuming that happens in six months, an investor who buys the stock now would see a $1.40 return plus $0.25 in dividends for a total of $1.65 or 11.7%, not bad for six months in today’s markets.

I am surprised arbitrage traders have not bid the stock higher, but it may be a function of this terrible market.

To recap, in April 2022, Fairfax Financial Holdings Limited (“Fairfax”) exercised warrants to purchase 25.0 million common shares of Atlas. The warrants, which were originally issued on July 16, 2018, had an exercise price of $8.05 per common share for an aggregate exercise price of $201.3 million.

Immediately following this exercise, Fairfax and its affiliates held in aggregate 124,805,753 common shares, representing approximately 45.1% of the then-issued and outstanding common shares of Atlas.

Fairfax continues to hold 6.0 million warrants.

On August 4, 2022, Atlas’ Board of Directors received a non-binding proposal letter, dated August 4, 2022, from Poseidon Acquisition Corp., an entity formed by certain affiliates of Fairfax, certain affiliates of the Washington Family (“Washington”), David Sokol, Chairman of the Board of Atlas, and Ocean Network Express Pte. Ltd., and certain of their respective affiliates, to acquire all of the outstanding common shares of Atlas, other than common shares owned by Fairfax, Washington, Mr. Sokol and certain executive officers of the Company, for $14.45 cash per common share.

On Sept 28, 2022, Poseidon Acquisition Corp. revised its price upwards to $15.50 cash per common share.

On or about November 1, 2022, Atlas will pay another $0.125 dividend, and on Feb 1, 2023, another $0.125 dividend.

Atlas is our only shipping stock at this time, so I am suggesting replacing it with DHT Holdings.

DHT Holdings

DHT Holdings Inc. (DHT:NYSE) is an independent crude oil tanker company with a fleet trading internationally and consists of crude oil tankers in the VLCC segment.

On June 30, 2022, DHT had a fleet of 24 VLCCs, with a total dwt of 7,453,519. I have followed this company for many years and see now as a good time to buy.

A recovery in the VLCC market was expected in 2022 after two years of Covid restrictions affecting oil demand. Tankers International reported that the data shows a definite boost.

Globally they count an additional 27 monthly liftings in the VLCC spot market in the first half of this year compared to the 2021 annual average, and we are very close to reaching pre-Covid fixing volumes.

27 additional cargoes per month would employ more than 30 VLCCs full-time if they were all traded between the AG and Singapore. Of course, some travel shorter distances, and some travel further.

Then add in the Ukraine war, and we see more tankers heading to Europe to make up for Russia’s supply. All things combined have caused tanker rates to soar.

On September 12, 2022, Tradewinds reported spot tanker rates at $43,600 per day, and now they are at $49,000 per day. This is about double from a year ago. This will give a big boost to DHT’s cash flow and earnings late this year and in 2023.

September 8, 2022, DHT Holdings announced a new dividend policy with 100% of net income being returned to shareholders in the form of quarterly cash dividends. The new policy will be implemented in the third quarter of 2022.

Svein Moxnes Harfjeld, President & CEO, stated, “The key considerations behind the new policy are the strength of our balance sheet and liquidity position in combination with no current plans for significant capital expenditures. The timing of the decision and its implementation reflects our constructive market outlook.”

I expect this will result in a minimum dividend of $0.50 per year and could easily go well over $1.00 if tanker rates stay high. At a $7.40 share price and a $0.50 dividend is a 6.8% yield.

DHT had a good second quarter

Quarterly Highlights:

  • In the second quarter of 2022, the Company’s VLCCs achieved an average rate of $24,300 per day.
  • Adjusted EBITDA for the second quarter of 2022 was $32.5 million. Net profit for the quarter was $10.0 million, which equates to $0.06 per basic share.
  • In May 2022, the Company entered into agreements to sell DHT Hawk, built in 2007, and DHT Falcon, built in 2006, for $40 million and $38 million, respectively. The vessels were both delivered during the second quarter of 2022, and the sales generated a combined gain of $12.7 million. The Company repaid the outstanding debt of $13.3 million combined on the two vessels.
  • In June 2022, the Company prepaid $23.1 million under the Nordea Credit Facility. The voluntary prepayment was made under the revolving credit facility tranche and may be re-borrowed.
  • In the second quarter of 2022, the Company purchased 2,826,771 of its own shares in the open market for an aggregate consideration of $15.9 million at an average price of $5.6256. All shares were retired upon receipt.
  • For the second quarter of 2022, the Company declared a cash dividend of $0.04 per share of outstanding common stock, payable on August 30, 2022, to shareholders of record as of August 23, 2022. This marks the 50th consecutive quarterly cash dividend. The shares will trade ex-dividend from August 22, 2022.

So far, in the third quarter of 2022, 68% of the available VLCC days have been booked at an average rate of $23,600 per day on a discharge-to-discharge basis (not including any potential profit splits on time charters).

This is not much different than Q2, but as time goes on, the cheaper rates will drop off and be replaced with the higher rates that are currently in the market.

For example, in July 2022, the Company entered into a five-year time charter for DHT Osprey at $37,000 per day, with the charterer’s option to extend two additional years at $40,000 per day and $45,000 per day respectively. The vessel is expected to deliver into the contract in August.

DHT has a relatively new fleet of ships compared to most tanker companies, with only three of their 24 VLCCs pre-2011. Those three were built in 2007. Newer builds are more efficient, have less maintenance, and are not subject to discount rates that can be applied to older tankers.

At the end of 2020, Statista reports that 46% of oil tankers are 15 years old and older.

I like DHT because they are well-run and very efficient. The stock has pulled back and is not reflecting its new dividend policy, which few, if any, other tanker companies can afford to do.

Most important is the low valuation of peers. Tanker stocks started to rally in April and May and have all pulled back in the past month. When I compared DHT to several other tanker stocks, it is at the bottom of the pack, with only a +15% gain in the past year. I see no good reason for this and believe the stock can play catch up and pay a good dividend too.

 

Struthers Stock Report Disclaimers: 

All forecasts and recommendations are based on opinion. Markets change direction with consensus beliefs, which may change at any time and without notice. The author/publisher of this publication has taken every precaution to provide the most accurate information possible. The information & data were obtained from sources believed to be reliable, but because the information & data source are beyond the author’s control, no representation or guarantee is made that it is complete or accurate.

The reader accepts information on the condition that errors or omissions shall not be made the basis for any claim, demand or cause for action. Because of the ever-changing nature of information & statistics the author/publisher strongly encourages the reader to communicate directly with the company and/or with their personal investment adviser to obtain up to date information.

Past results are not necessarily indicative of future results. Any statements non-factual in nature constitute only current opinions, which are subject to change. The author/publisher may or may not have a position in the securities and/or options relating thereto, & may make purchases and/or sales of these securities relating thereto from time to time in the open market or otherwise. Neither the information, nor opinions expressed, shall be construed as a solicitation to buy or sell any stock, futures or options contract mentioned herein. The author/publisher of this letter is not a qualified financial adviser & is not acting as such in this publication.

Disclosures: 

1) Ron Struthers: I, or members of my immediate household or family, own shares of the following companies mentioned in this article: TC Energy Corp. I personally am, or members of my immediate household or family are, paid by the following companies mentioned in this article: None. My company currently has a financial relationship with the following companies mentioned in this article: None. I determined which companies would be included in this article based on my research and understanding of the sector.

2) The following companies mentioned in this article are billboard sponsors of Streetwise Reports: None. Click here for important disclosures about sponsor fees. The information provided above is for informational purposes only and is not a recommendation to buy or sell any security.

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More Global Forex Turmoil Ahead

By Dan Steinbock

– As if the world economy would need another crisis trigger, global foreign exchange markets are in historical turmoil. Over time, it can’t be contained without a more diversified global reserve currency system.

According to Bloomberg, global foreign currency reserves have fallen some 7.8% to $12 trillion this year; a decline of $1 trillion, or more than in almost two decades, when Bloomberg began to compile its data.

The plunge reflects the frantic activity of central banks across the world as they struggle to intervene and support ailing currencies.  In late September, the euro coped with its 20-year low against the US dollar.

Meanwhile, the British pound suffered its all-time low vis-à-vis the greenback. Recently, the pound has recovered some of the lost ground, as has the euro. But new pressures will ensue as the Fed will continue its tightening.

In September, Japan spent some $20 billion to slow the yen’s slide in its first intervention to boost the currency since 1998. That’s 19% of the loss of reserves this year. Still, the yen has already lost a fifth of its value this year, which could prove its worst since 1970. Meanwhile, Japan’s gross debt as percentage of the GDP could soar close to 270% by the year-end; the highest among major advanced economies – and most vulnerable to a crisis that would have global repercussions.

Emerging Asia has not been immune to these pressures.

Korea’s plunge, India’s all-time low, China’s dual story

In September, Korean foreign reserves amounted to $417 billion, having taken a $20 billion hit from the previous month. That’s the fastest on-month decline since the West’s financial crisis in October 2008.

In India, forex reserves have tumbled $96 billion this year to $538 billion. The pressures are accelerating as inflation is rising and the Fed’s hikes continue.

While currency depreciation can benefit exporters, it tends to foster capital flight and imported inflation, both of which are spreading in emerging Asia. Hence, too, the plunge of India’s forex reserves by $110 billion in the last 13 months and the rupee’s all-time low against the greenback.

At the end of September, Reuters reported that Chinese state-owned banks are preparing to sell dollars and buy yuan to boost the local currency. The yuan has fallen 11% against the dollar and could finish the year with its biggest decline against the greenback since 1994.

Yet, the dollar pressures tell only a part of the story. China’s central bank is increasingly managing the yuan against the currencies of a broad group of major trading partners, not just against the greenback. Despite its decline vis-à-vis the dollar, the yuan has appreciated against the euro, the yen and other major currencies.

Today, forex volatility is not a mainly economic issue. It also reflects geopolitical objectives.

Huge forex interventions

As the world economy is teetering at the edge of still another global recession, the Fed’s belated and aggressive tightening is causing huge monetary shocks in the world economy.

While the magnitude of the decline of global forex reserves is massive, the efforts to exploit reserves to protect currencies are nothing new. Nevertheless, these huge forex interventions take place in the most challenging economic and geopolitical moment since World War II, due to a series of shocks:

  • the failure of global recovery since 2017, as a result of US protectionism and misguided trade wars
  • the subsequent Covid-19 pandemic and the accompanying global depression and the consequent lost years in many countries
  • over a decade of huge fiscal stimulus packages, ultra-low rates and rounds of quantitative easing in the West
  • the ensuing debt crises in many middle- and low-income countries
  • the US-led NATO war against Russia in Ukraine, which has led to global energy and food shocks and the worst nuclear crisis since 1962

If the Fed sticks to its “dot plot,” interest rates could reach 4.4% by December, above 3.4% projected in June, and rise to 4.6% next year. As a result, the peso could slide to an all-time low of about 62 against the US dollar later in the year. Just as the global forex turmoil could prevail until the first quarter of 2023.

Even if the buoyant dollar will make the US a more expensive place to produce, it will affect America less severely than its trading partners, mainly because US trade is almost entirely invoiced in dollars.

But what will happen when the dollar’s surge against other major currencies will eclipse? Some previous big run-ups in the dollar’s value, particularly in the mid-1980s and early 2000s, were eventually followed by sharp declines. And this time could prove worse.

A rising dollar is neither stabilizing nor strong

After two decades of postwar recovery in Western Europe and Japan, US began to suffer from huge trade deficits. In 1971, President Nixon ended unilaterally the convertibility of the dollar to gold, which resulted in a price shock that reverberated across the world.

As gold no longer offered a yardstick for value, the perception of value replaced value itself.

Since the 1970s, three periods of dollar surges have been followed by periods of decline that have caused much international collateral damage. Each of these surges reflects progressive relative erosion of the dollar. When the dollar surged with sky-high rates in the early 1980s, US sovereign debt was still less than 40% of America’s GDP. With the surge in the early 2000s, the ratio was hovering around 55%. That prevailed until the 2008 crisis, which was overcome with massive debt-taking that pushed the ratio beyond 100% in the early 2010s.

Then came the pandemic and the Biden administration’s irresponsible fiscal policies and now the ratio exceeds 137% of US GDP (more than twice as high than the Philippines’ 62%). As the trendline will accelerate in the coming years, the ratio could double by 2050 (Figure).

Figure U.S. dollar Index and debt-to-GDP ratio

More Global Forex Turmoil Ahead

Source: TradingEconomics; Difference Group

Toward the crisis    

Today, US debt per GDP is where that of Italy was in the early 2010s, right before Rome’s debt crisis. Here’s the problem: The Italian lira is irrelevant in international transactions, but US dollar isn’t.

The presumed strength of the U.S. dollar no longer relies on America’s economic fundamentals, but on a perception that such fundamentals prevail, despite drastic shifts in the world economy.

U.S. dollar is no longer a sustained safe haven, but a temporary safe house. And that’s why the day of reckoning is no longer a matter of principle, just a matter of time.

About the Author:

Dr. Dan Steinbock is an internationally recognized strategist of the multipolar world and the founder of Difference Group. He has served at India, China and America Institute (US), Shanghai Institutes for International Studies (China) and the EU Center (Singapore). For more, see https://www.differencegroup.net/

Based on Dr Steinbock’s global briefing of Oct. 7, 2022

Currency Speculators continued to boost their Euro bets to 17-week high

By InvestMacro

Here are the latest charts and statistics for the Commitment of Traders (COT) data published by the Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).

The latest COT data is updated through Tuesday October 4th and shows a quick view of how large market participants (for-profit speculators and commercial traders) were positioned in the futures markets. All currency positions are in direct relation to the US dollar where, for example, a bet for the euro is a bet that the euro will rise versus the dollar while a bet against the euro will be a bet that the euro will decline versus the dollar.

Weekly Speculator Changes

The COT currency market speculator bets were slightly lower this week as five out of the eleven currency markets we cover had higher positioning while the other six markets had lower speculator contracts.

Leading the gains for the currency markets was the Euro (9,885 contracts) with the Australian dollar (6,889 contracts), the Mexican peso (4,001 contracts), the US Dollar Index (1,135 contracts) and the Japanese yen (933 contracts) also showing a positive week.

The currencies leading the declines in speculator bets this week were the Brazilian real (-7,985 contracts) with the Canadian dollar (-3,741 contracts), the British pound sterling (-3,115 contracts),  the New Zealand dollar (-2,507 contracts), the Swiss franc (-1,122 contracts) and Bitcoin (-1,056 contracts) also registering lower bets on the week.

Highlighting the COT currency positioning this week is the Euro speculators positioning that has improved for the fifth straight week. Euro speculators have now boosted their net positions by a total of +91,358 contracts over these past five weeks. This has taken the net positioning from -47,676 contracts on August 30th to a total of +43,682 contracts this week and to the most bullish level since June 7th, a span of 17 weeks.

Speculators are clearly betting that the Euro is near or getting near a bottom against the US dollar as the Euro prices have been testing 20-year lows versus its American counterpart.

Speculator contracts are usually trend-following and stay relatively in lock-step with prices. The current unusual situation in the Euro contracts can be contrasted with other major currencies at the moment. The British pound sterling net positions are currently at -49,539 contracts while its currency is at similar multi-decade lows and the Japanese yen speculator level is at -81,623 contracts while its currency is also near its own 25-year lows.

The European economic situation seems to be as uncertain as the UK (recession?) and the Japanese (low interest rates) situations with an energy crisis potentially looming and a recession on the horizon. However, speculators are feeling differently at the moment.

Meanwhile in the markets, the EURUSD exchange rate remained below parity this week and fell modestly by less than -1.00 percent, closing out the week at the 0.9742 exchange rate.


Data Snapshot of Forex Market Traders | Columns Legend
Oct-04-2022OIOI-IndexSpec-NetSpec-IndexCom-NetCOM-IndexSmalls-NetSmalls-Index
USD Index54,6387731,69778-36,817175,12073
EUR640,4585543,68248-56,8486013,1660
GBP256,90671-49,5392679,11688-29,5770
JPY243,28976-81,6231993,32481-11,70130
CHF43,12127-6,8523916,02269-9,17026
CAD141,79925-21,4071517,947843,46037
AUD139,49037-27,7645938,80448-11,04026
NZD48,48741-13,9784617,25959-3,28114
MXN192,35246-37,3211131,914865,40766
RUB20,93047,54331-7,15069-39324
BRL39,9842725,77976-27,570241,79186
Bitcoin14,23082-3276-421045323

 


US Dollar Index (77.8 percent) leads Strength Scores

Strength Scores (a normalized measure of Speculator positions over a 3-Year range, from 0 to 100 where above 80 is extreme bullish and below 20 is extreme bearish) showed that the US Dollar Index (77.8 percent) is back in the lead for the currency markets scores. Bitcoin (76.4 percent) and the Brazilian Real (75.7 percent) come in as the next highest in the currency markets in strength scores.

On the downside, the Mexican Peso (11.4 percent), Canadian Dollar (15.3 percent) and the Japanese Yen (18.6 percent) come in at the lowest strength level currently. All three of these markets are in bearish extreme positions with scores under the 20 percent level.

 

Strength Statistics:
US Dollar Index (77.8 percent) vs US Dollar Index previous week (75.9 percent)
EuroFX (48.4 percent) vs EuroFX previous week (45.4 percent)
British Pound Sterling (26.5 percent) vs British Pound Sterling previous week (29.2 percent)
Japanese Yen (18.6 percent) vs Japanese Yen previous week (18.0 percent)
Swiss Franc (39.1 percent) vs Swiss Franc previous week (42.0 percent)
Canadian Dollar (15.3 percent) vs Canadian Dollar previous week (19.5 percent)
Australian Dollar (59.1 percent) vs Australian Dollar previous week (52.7 percent)
New Zealand Dollar (45.9 percent) vs New Zealand Dollar previous week (50.3 percent)
Mexican Peso (11.4 percent) vs Mexican Peso previous week (9.7 percent)
Brazilian Real (75.7 percent) vs Brazilian Real previous week (83.6 percent)
Bitcoin (76.4 percent) vs Bitcoin previous week (94.8 percent)

Australian Dollar (29.9 percent) leads Strength Trends

Strength Score Trends (or move index, calculates the 6-week changes in strength scores) show that the Australian Dollar (29.9 percent) leads the past six weeks trends for the currency markets this week. The EuroFX (26.9 percent) and the Brazilian Real (19.1 percent) fill out the rest of the positive movers in the latest trends data.

The Canadian Dollar (-50.1 percent) leads the downside trend scores currently while the next markets with lower trend scores were the Japanese Yen (-26.4 percent), New Zealand Dollar (-21.7 percent) and the British Pound Sterling (-18.5 percent).

Strength Trend Statistics:
US Dollar Index (-5.7 percent) vs US Dollar Index previous week (-12.3 percent)
EuroFX (26.9 percent) vs EuroFX previous week (23.5 percent)
British Pound Sterling (-18.5 percent) vs British Pound Sterling previous week (-11.4 percent)
Japanese Yen (-26.4 percent) vs Japanese Yen previous week (-33.1 percent)
Swiss Franc (-11.3 percent) vs Swiss Franc previous week (-1.6 percent)
Canadian Dollar (-50.1 percent) vs Canadian Dollar previous week (-50.0 percent)
Australian Dollar (29.9 percent) vs Australian Dollar previous week (22.8 percent)
New Zealand Dollar (-21.7 percent) vs New Zealand Dollar previous week (-23.0 percent)
Mexican Peso (-2.6 percent) vs Mexican Peso previous week (-8.5 percent)
Brazilian Real (19.1 percent) vs Brazilian Real previous week (26.8 percent)
Bitcoin (-17.4 percent) vs Bitcoin previous week (19.5 percent)


Individual COT Forex Markets:

US Dollar Index Futures:

US Dollar Index Forex Futures COT ChartThe US Dollar Index large speculator standing this week recorded a net position of 31,697 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly boost of 1,135 contracts from the previous week which had a total of 30,562 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bullish with a score of 77.8 percent. The commercials are Bearish-Extreme with a score of 17.3 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bullish with a score of 72.5 percent.

US DOLLAR INDEX StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:81.43.513.0
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:23.370.93.7
– Net Position:31,697-36,8175,120
– Gross Longs:44,4491,9267,123
– Gross Shorts:12,75238,7432,003
– Long to Short Ratio:3.5 to 10.0 to 13.6 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):77.817.372.5
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):BullishBearish-ExtremeBullish
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:-5.71.228.7

 


Euro Currency Futures:

Euro Currency Futures COT ChartThe Euro Currency large speculator standing this week recorded a net position of 43,682 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly rise of 9,885 contracts from the previous week which had a total of 33,797 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bearish with a score of 48.4 percent. The commercials are Bullish with a score of 59.9 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bearish-Extreme with a score of 0.0 percent.

EURO Currency StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:31.154.511.6
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:24.363.39.5
– Net Position:43,682-56,84813,166
– Gross Longs:199,391348,81774,175
– Gross Shorts:155,709405,66561,009
– Long to Short Ratio:1.3 to 10.9 to 11.2 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):48.459.90.0
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):BearishBullishBearish-Extreme
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:26.9-23.0-10.6

 


British Pound Sterling Futures:

British Pound Sterling Futures COT ChartThe British Pound Sterling large speculator standing this week recorded a net position of -49,539 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly decline of -3,115 contracts from the previous week which had a total of -46,424 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bearish with a score of 26.5 percent. The commercials are Bullish-Extreme with a score of 87.8 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bearish-Extreme with a score of 0.0 percent.

BRITISH POUND StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:16.474.76.4
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:35.743.917.9
– Net Position:-49,53979,116-29,577
– Gross Longs:42,078191,81916,367
– Gross Shorts:91,617112,70345,944
– Long to Short Ratio:0.5 to 11.7 to 10.4 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):26.587.80.0
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):BearishBullish-ExtremeBearish-Extreme
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:-18.520.3-16.4

 


Japanese Yen Futures:

Japanese Yen Forex Futures COT ChartThe Japanese Yen large speculator standing this week recorded a net position of -81,623 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly rise of 933 contracts from the previous week which had a total of -82,556 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bearish-Extreme with a score of 18.6 percent. The commercials are Bullish-Extreme with a score of 81.2 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bearish with a score of 29.7 percent.

JAPANESE YEN StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:11.176.311.0
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:44.638.015.8
– Net Position:-81,62393,324-11,701
– Gross Longs:26,962185,69126,766
– Gross Shorts:108,58592,36738,467
– Long to Short Ratio:0.2 to 12.0 to 10.7 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):18.681.229.7
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):Bearish-ExtremeBullish-ExtremeBearish
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:-26.419.94.0

 


Swiss Franc Futures:

Swiss Franc Forex Futures COT ChartThe Swiss Franc large speculator standing this week recorded a net position of -6,852 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly lowering of -1,122 contracts from the previous week which had a total of -5,730 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bearish with a score of 39.1 percent. The commercials are Bullish with a score of 69.0 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bearish with a score of 26.5 percent.

SWISS FRANC StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:18.160.621.2
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:34.023.542.4
– Net Position:-6,85216,022-9,170
– Gross Longs:7,81626,1409,128
– Gross Shorts:14,66810,11818,298
– Long to Short Ratio:0.5 to 12.6 to 10.5 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):39.169.026.5
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):BearishBullishBearish
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:-11.32.010.8

 


Canadian Dollar Futures:

Canadian Dollar Forex Futures COT ChartThe Canadian Dollar large speculator standing this week recorded a net position of -21,407 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly lowering of -3,741 contracts from the previous week which had a total of -17,666 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bearish-Extreme with a score of 15.3 percent. The commercials are Bullish-Extreme with a score of 83.7 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bearish with a score of 37.1 percent.

CANADIAN DOLLAR StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:25.649.823.3
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:40.737.120.8
– Net Position:-21,40717,9473,460
– Gross Longs:36,24670,62433,001
– Gross Shorts:57,65352,67729,541
– Long to Short Ratio:0.6 to 11.3 to 11.1 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):15.383.737.1
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):Bearish-ExtremeBullish-ExtremeBearish
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:-50.139.7-6.0

 


Australian Dollar Futures:

Australian Dollar Forex Futures COT ChartThe Australian Dollar large speculator standing this week recorded a net position of -27,764 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly advance of 6,889 contracts from the previous week which had a total of -34,653 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bullish with a score of 59.1 percent. The commercials are Bearish with a score of 47.8 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bearish with a score of 25.5 percent.

AUSTRALIAN DOLLAR StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:26.058.812.1
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:45.931.020.0
– Net Position:-27,76438,804-11,040
– Gross Longs:36,24882,08016,813
– Gross Shorts:64,01243,27627,853
– Long to Short Ratio:0.6 to 11.9 to 10.6 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):59.147.825.5
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):BullishBearishBearish
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:29.9-18.9-16.8

 


New Zealand Dollar Futures:

New Zealand Dollar Forex Futures COT ChartThe New Zealand Dollar large speculator standing this week recorded a net position of -13,978 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly reduction of -2,507 contracts from the previous week which had a total of -11,471 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bearish with a score of 45.9 percent. The commercials are Bullish with a score of 58.6 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bearish-Extreme with a score of 13.9 percent.

NEW ZEALAND DOLLAR StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:30.963.84.9
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:59.728.311.6
– Net Position:-13,97817,259-3,281
– Gross Longs:14,96630,9572,359
– Gross Shorts:28,94413,6985,640
– Long to Short Ratio:0.5 to 12.3 to 10.4 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):45.958.613.9
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):BearishBullishBearish-Extreme
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:-21.719.42.8

 


Mexican Peso Futures:

Mexican Peso Futures COT ChartThe Mexican Peso large speculator standing this week recorded a net position of -37,321 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly gain of 4,001 contracts from the previous week which had a total of -41,322 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bearish-Extreme with a score of 11.4 percent. The commercials are Bullish-Extreme with a score of 86.1 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bullish with a score of 65.9 percent.

MEXICAN PESO StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:56.539.34.1
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:75.922.71.3
– Net Position:-37,32131,9145,407
– Gross Longs:108,62675,6487,916
– Gross Shorts:145,94743,7342,509
– Long to Short Ratio:0.7 to 11.7 to 13.2 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):11.486.165.9
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):Bearish-ExtremeBullish-ExtremeBullish
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:-2.61.86.7

 


Brazilian Real Futures:

Brazil Real Futures COT ChartThe Brazilian Real large speculator standing this week recorded a net position of 25,779 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly lowering of -7,985 contracts from the previous week which had a total of 33,764 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bullish with a score of 75.7 percent. The commercials are Bearish with a score of 24.4 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bullish-Extreme with a score of 85.8 percent.

BRAZIL REAL StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:72.319.87.3
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:7.888.82.9
– Net Position:25,779-27,5701,791
– Gross Longs:28,8947,9202,935
– Gross Shorts:3,11535,4901,144
– Long to Short Ratio:9.3 to 10.2 to 12.6 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):75.724.485.8
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):BullishBearishBullish-Extreme
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:19.1-18.6-4.0

 


Bitcoin Futures:

Bitcoin Crypto Futures COT ChartThe Bitcoin large speculator standing this week recorded a net position of -32 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly reduction of -1,056 contracts from the previous week which had a total of 1,024 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bullish with a score of 76.4 percent. The commercials are Bearish with a score of 44.1 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bearish with a score of 23.2 percent.

BITCOIN StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:80.72.69.1
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:80.95.55.9
– Net Position:-32-421453
– Gross Longs:11,4813631,291
– Gross Shorts:11,513784838
– Long to Short Ratio:1.0 to 10.5 to 11.5 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):76.444.123.2
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):BullishBearishBearish
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:-17.437.85.0

 


Article By InvestMacroReceive our weekly COT Newsletter

*COT Report: The COT data, released weekly to the public each Friday, is updated through the most recent Tuesday (data is 3 days old) and shows a quick view of how large speculators or non-commercials (for-profit traders) were positioned in the futures markets.

The CFTC categorizes trader positions according to commercial hedgers (traders who use futures contracts for hedging as part of the business), non-commercials (large traders who speculate to realize trading profits) and nonreportable traders (usually small traders/speculators) as well as their open interest (contracts open in the market at time of reporting). See CFTC criteria here.

 

Silver Speculator bets rise for 4th week, climb to highest since June

By InvestMacro

Here are the latest charts and statistics for the Commitment of Traders (COT) reports data published by the Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).

The latest COT data is updated through Tuesday October 4th and shows a quick view of how large traders (for-profit speculators and commercial entities) were positioned in the futures markets.

Weekly Speculator Changes

The COT precious metals speculator bets were higher this week all across the board as all five of the metals markets we cover saw stronger sentiment and increased positioning.

Leading the gains for the precious metals markets was Gold (36,304 contracts) with Copper (9,505 contracts), Silver (7,950 contracts), Platinum (3,120 contracts) and Palladium (235 contracts) also showing a positive week.

Highlighting the COT Metals this week is the gains in the Silver speculator positions. Silver speculators boosted their bets this week for a fourth straight week and have now pushed their bets higher by +21,492 contracts over that time-frame. This recent turnaround in sentiment brought the overall net position back out of bearish territory after spending five straight weeks there from August 23rd to September 20th. This week’s total net position of +8,708 contracts is the best level for Silver since June 28th. The Silver price closed this week above the $20.25 level and managed to touch its highest level since June above $21 before closing lower.


Data Snapshot of Commodity Market Traders | Columns Legend
Oct-04-2022OIOI-IndexSpec-NetSpec-IndexCom-NetCOM-IndexSmalls-NetSmalls-Index
WTI Crude1,495,5382241,9998-260,8549418,85531
Gold437,065088,38512-96,548898,1630
Silver129,52408,70824-17,617798,90913
Copper166,1617-18,2512318,0237922827
Palladium7,0805-596203647723257
Platinum55,682143,28113-7,137873,85620
Natural Gas967,1264-159,09631126,0467133,05058
Brent162,76210-39,8204438,106571,71432
Heating Oil282,9882815,75566-32,1033716,34855
Soybeans677,1782266,75734-40,08374-26,67426
Corn1,365,62214304,96269-239,95938-65,0036
Coffee184,698042,15175-44,264292,11319
Sugar687,018047,08746-63,3545616,26728
Wheat291,61435,624261,90162-7,52571

 


Strength Scores show Silver and Copper rise

Strength scores (a measure of the 3-Year range of Speculator positions, from 0 to 100 where above 80 is extreme bullish and below 20 is extreme bearish) showed that the Silver (23.7 percent) and Copper (22.8 percent) are leading the metals category currently. Both of these markets have now seen there strength scores improve and are above the 20 percent level and out of a bearish extreme position.

On the downside, Gold (12.0 percent), Platinum (13.5 percent) and Palladium (19.9 percent) continue to be at the lowest strength levels currently and in bearish extreme positions (below 20 percent).


Strength Statistics:
Gold (12.0 percent) vs Gold previous week (0.0 percent)
Silver (23.7 percent) vs Silver previous week (14.9 percent)
Copper (22.8 percent) vs Copper previous week (15.3 percent)
Platinum (13.5 percent) vs Platinum previous week (9.3 percent)
Palladium (19.9 percent) vs Palladium previous week (18.6 percent)

Silver leads the Strength Trends

Strength Score Trends (or move index, calculates the 6-week changes in strength scores) show that Silver (14.6 percent) leads the past six weeks trends for metals this week. Palladium (6.9 percent), Platinum (5.2 percent) and Copper (0.6 percent) are all seeing positive moves for the past 6-weeks in the latest trends data.

Gold (-12.4 percent) is the only market this week with lower trend scores.

 


Move Statistics:
Gold (-12.4 percent) vs Gold previous week (-29.5 percent)
Silver (14.6 percent) vs Silver previous week (-3.0 percent)
Copper (0.6 percent) vs Copper previous week (0.4 percent)
Platinum (5.2 percent) vs Platinum previous week (-3.7 percent)
Palladium (6.9 percent) vs Palladium previous week (4.4 percent)


Individual Markets:

Gold Comex Futures:

Gold Futures COT ChartThe Gold Comex Futures large speculator standing this week came in at a net position of 88,385 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly boost of 36,304 contracts from the previous week which had a total of 52,081 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bearish-Extreme with a score of 12.0 percent. The commercials are Bullish-Extreme with a score of 89.4 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bearish-Extreme with a score of 0.0 percent.

Gold Futures StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:49.426.68.4
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:29.248.76.5
– Net Position:88,385-96,5488,163
– Gross Longs:215,964116,45136,704
– Gross Shorts:127,579212,99928,541
– Long to Short Ratio:1.7 to 10.5 to 11.3 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):12.089.40.0
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):Bearish-ExtremeBullish-ExtremeBearish-Extreme
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:-12.412.8-10.2

 


Silver Comex Futures:

Silver Futures COT ChartThe Silver Comex Futures large speculator standing this week came in at a net position of 8,708 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly boost of 7,950 contracts from the previous week which had a total of 758 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bearish with a score of 23.7 percent. The commercials are Bullish with a score of 78.6 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bearish-Extreme with a score of 13.4 percent.

Silver Futures StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:40.136.917.0
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:33.450.510.1
– Net Position:8,708-17,6178,909
– Gross Longs:51,92647,75522,040
– Gross Shorts:43,21865,37213,131
– Long to Short Ratio:1.2 to 10.7 to 11.7 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):23.778.613.4
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):BearishBullishBearish-Extreme
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:14.6-12.60.4

 


Copper Grade #1 Futures:

Copper Futures COT ChartThe Copper Grade #1 Futures large speculator standing this week came in at a net position of -18,251 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly boost of 9,505 contracts from the previous week which had a total of -27,756 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bearish with a score of 22.8 percent. The commercials are Bullish with a score of 79.0 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bearish with a score of 26.6 percent.

Copper Futures StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:30.447.48.7
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:41.436.68.6
– Net Position:-18,25118,023228
– Gross Longs:50,47078,81714,537
– Gross Shorts:68,72160,79414,309
– Long to Short Ratio:0.7 to 11.3 to 11.0 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):22.879.026.6
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):BearishBullishBearish
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:0.6-2.414.3

 


Platinum Futures:

Platinum Futures COT ChartThe Platinum Futures large speculator standing this week came in at a net position of 3,281 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly advance of 3,120 contracts from the previous week which had a total of 161 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bearish-Extreme with a score of 13.5 percent. The commercials are Bullish-Extreme with a score of 87.0 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bearish-Extreme with a score of 19.8 percent.

Platinum Futures StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:46.037.912.9
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:40.150.76.0
– Net Position:3,281-7,1373,856
– Gross Longs:25,61021,1167,197
– Gross Shorts:22,32928,2533,341
– Long to Short Ratio:1.1 to 10.7 to 12.2 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):13.587.019.8
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):Bearish-ExtremeBullish-ExtremeBearish-Extreme
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:5.2-5.23.1

 


Palladium Futures:

Palladium Futures COT ChartThe Palladium Futures large speculator standing this week came in at a net position of -596 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly lift of 235 contracts from the previous week which had a total of -831 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bearish-Extreme with a score of 19.9 percent. The commercials are Bullish with a score of 76.6 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bullish with a score of 57.3 percent.

Palladium Futures StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:30.948.119.1
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:39.443.015.8
– Net Position:-596364232
– Gross Longs:2,1913,4091,352
– Gross Shorts:2,7873,0451,120
– Long to Short Ratio:0.8 to 11.1 to 11.2 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):19.976.657.3
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):Bearish-ExtremeBullishBullish
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:6.9-9.931.8

 


Article By InvestMacroReceive our weekly COT Newsletter

*COT Report: The COT data, released weekly to the public each Friday, is updated through the most recent Tuesday (data is 3 days old) and shows a quick view of how large speculators or non-commercials (for-profit traders) were positioned in the futures markets.

The CFTC categorizes trader positions according to commercial hedgers (traders who use futures contracts for hedging as part of the business), non-commercials (large traders who speculate to realize trading profits) and nonreportable traders (usually small traders/speculators) as well as their open interest (contracts open in the market at time of reporting). See CFTC criteria here.

COT Speculator Extremes: Soybean Meal & Nikkei 225 lead weekly Bullish & Bearish Positions

By InvestMacro

The latest update for the weekly Commitment of Traders (COT) report was released by the Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) on Friday for data ending on Tuesday October 4th.

This weekly Extreme Positions report highlights the Top Most Bullish and Top Most Bearish Positions for the speculator category. Extreme positioning in these markets can foreshadow strong moves in the underlying market.

To signify an extreme position, we use the Strength Index (also known as the COT Index) of each instrument, a common method of measuring COT data. The Strength Index is simply a comparison of current trader positions against the range of positions over the previous 3 years. We use over 80 percent as extremely bullish and under 20 percent as extremely bearish.

Compare Strength Index scores across all markets in the data table or cot leaders table, see a profile of speculators in COT markets in our cot reports guide.


Here Are This Week’s Most Bullish Speculator Positions:

Soybean Meal – 86.4 percent

This week there are only two bullish markets (above the 80 percent) and Soybean Meal is the most bullish market of the week. This market has come in near the top of the most bullish markets for several weeks now. The strength score for Soybean Meal is currently 86.4 percent, down from 91.5 percent last week and 97.9 percent the week before.

The net speculator positioning for Soybean Meal dipped for a second straight this week but the overall net position has remained above the +100,000 contract level for the thirteenth consecutive week. This is the longest such streak since the middle of 2018.


Nikkei 225 – 84.9 percent

 


The Nikkei 225 speculator futures position comes in as the second most bullish extreme standing this week. The Nikkei 225 speculator level is currently at a 85 percent score of its 3-year range.

The speculator position totaled 1,558 net contracts this week which was a change of just 38 contracts from last week. The Nikkei strength score is near the top of the list because over the past 3 years, speculators have usually held a bearish position and this has changed over the past two weeks (both bullish levels).


This Week’s Most Bearish Speculator Positions:

MSCI EAFE MINI – 2.7 percent

The EAFE Mini registered as the most bearish of the markets this week. The EAFE came in with a strength score of just 2.7 percent out of its 3-year range, near the very bottom of its range.

Speculators sharply cut their net positions this week by -22,448 contracts and pushed the overall net positioning for speculators to the lowest level since July.


Ultra 10-Year U.S. T-Note – 7.4 percent

The Ultra 10-Year Bond large speculator position comes in as the next bearish extreme standing this week. The Ultra 10-Year Bond speculator level is currently at a 7.4 percent score of its 3-year range.

The speculator position was a total of -82,091 net contracts this week, a weekly change of -22,331 contracts from last week. This market has seen a total speculator net position decline of -75,305 contracts over the past three weeks and has pushed the net position to the lowest level since May 31st.


WTI Crude Oil – 8.3 percent


The WTI Crude Oil speculator position is next in line of the most bearish extreme standings on the week. The WTI Crude speculator level is currently residing at a 8.3 percent score of its 3-year range.

The speculator position was a total of 241,999 net contracts this week which had a positive gain by 15,919 contracts from last week. Overall, the net position for WTI futures has been under the +300,000 net contract level for the past sixteen weeks, something that has not happened since 2015.


Mexican Peso – 11.4 percent


The Mexican Peso speculator position comes in as the next most bearish extreme standing of the week. The MXN speculator level currently sits at a 11.4 percent score of its 3-year range.

The speculator position was -37,321 net contracts this week and had a gain by 4,001 contracts from last week. The peso net contract positioning has been lower in two out of the past three weeks and touched the lowest level in forty-two weeks last week (before this week’s gain by 4,001 contracts).


Russell 2000 Mini – 11.6 percent

The Russell 2000 Mini speculator position comes in as the next most bearish extreme standing of the week. The Russell 2000 Mini speculator level is currently at a 11.6 percent score of its 3-year range.

The overall large speculator position was -99,193 net contracts this week and had a gain by 6,868 contracts from last week. The Russell Mini has now been in a continuous bearish position for the past eighty weeks, dating back to March of 2021.


Gold – 12 percent


Finally, the Gold speculator position comes in as the sixth most bearish extreme standing for this week. The Gold speculator level is currently at a 12 percent score of its 3-year range.

The speculator position was 88,385 net contracts this week and bounced back from multiple weeks of declines to rise by 36,304 contracts from last week.


Article By InvestMacroReceive our weekly COT Newsletter

*COT Report: The COT data, released weekly to the public each Friday, is updated through the most recent Tuesday (data is 3 days old) and shows a quick view of how large speculators or non-commercials (for-profit traders) were positioned in the futures markets.

The CFTC categorizes trader positions according to commercial hedgers (traders who use futures contracts for hedging as part of the business), non-commercials (large traders who speculate to realize trading profits) and nonreportable traders (usually small traders/speculators) as well as their open interest (contracts open in the market at time of reporting). See CFTC criteria here.

Charts for Lithium Co. Show It’s ‘Heading Higher’

Source: Clive Maund  (10/4/22)

In light of yesterday’s lithium results from Argentina Lithium & Energy Corp., expert Clive Maund takes a look at the 10-year, 15-month, and 6-month charts for the natural resource company to tell you his outlook.

Regardless of how many electric vehicles spontaneously combust in the near future, the charts for Argentina Lithium & Energy Corp. (LIT:TSX.V; PNXLF:OTC; OAY3:FSE) suggest that it is headed higher, possibly much higher, perhaps for reasons of its own such as (this added later) the company coming out with positive lithium results yesterday from its second drill hole at Rincon West.

We’ll start by looking at the long-term 10-year chart to get a “big picture” perspective on what’s going on with the stock.

Argentina Lithium & Energy Corp is therefore rated an immediate speculative Buy here.

On this chart, we can see that, following a massive spike higher in 2016 and a lesser spike higher in 2017, it went into a bearmarket that did more than erase all of the prior gains — it became almost worthless, dropping to about CA$0.04 at the lows of the giant Cup & Handle base that is delineated on the chart.

A year ago, it spiked dramatically higher to complete the right side of the Cup before slumping back to slowly complete the Handle part of the pattern, which price / volumen action just over the past couple of weeks suggests that it may now have done.

The 15-month chart enables us to examine in much more detail the entire Handle part of the pattern that formed following the spike a year ago.

As we can see, this Handle has taken the form of an orderly downtrend, and in recent months, it has become clear that a base pattern has been forming at the support above its lower boundary that we will now proceed to look at in more detail on the 6-month chart.

The 6-month chart looks most encouraging. First off, we can see that a fine Double Bottom has formed from early August along a line of support at the 20-cent level.

Next, we can see the persistent heavy buying that started to kick in about two weeks ago that has driven the Accumulation line strongly higher.

Lastly, we can see that, after declining steeply for months, the 50-day moving average has started to turn up and thus converge with the falling 200-day, which of course, makes a rally more likely.

The advance late in September brought it up to a band of significant resistance in the CA$0.26 to CA$0.28 zone, where it was entitled to pause, which is what it has done, but the positive price/volume action of the past couple of weeks with largish white candles and strong upside volume suggest that “something is going on” with this stock and that it won’t be long before it succeeds in breaking above this resistance which should lead to a larger move.

Argentina Lithium & Energy Corp is therefore rated an immediate speculative Buy here. The stock trades in good volumes on the US OTC market, where there has been a big increase in upside volume in recent weeks.

Argentina Lithium & Energy Corp.’s website.

Argentina Lithium & Energy Corp. closed at CA$0.27, $0.189 on September 30, 2022.

CliveMaund.com Disclosures

The above represents the opinion and analysis of Mr. Maund, based on data available to him, at the time of writing. Mr. Maund’s opinions are his own, and are not a recommendation or an offer to buy or sell securities. Mr. Maund is an independent analyst who receives no compensation of any kind from any groups, individuals or corporations mentioned in his reports. As trading and investing in any financial markets may involve serious risk of loss, Mr. Maund recommends that you consult with a qualified investment advisor, one licensed by appropriate regulatory agencies in your legal jurisdiction and do your own due diligence and research when making any kind of a transaction with financial ramifications. Although a qualified and experienced stock market analyst, Clive Maund is not a Registered Securities Advisor. Therefore Mr. Maund’s opinions on the market and stocks can only be construed as a solicitation to buy and sell securities when they are subject to the prior approval and endorsement of a Registered Securities Advisor operating in accordance with the appropriate regulations in your area of jurisdiction.

Disclosures:
1) Clive Maund: I, or members of my immediate household or family, own securities of the following companies mentioned in this article: None. I personally am, or members of my immediate household or family are, paid by the following companies mentioned in this article: None.

2) The following companies mentioned in this article are billboard sponsors of Streetwise Reports: Argentina Lithium & Energy Corp. Click here for important disclosures about sponsor fees. As of the date of this article, an affiliate of Streetwise Reports has a consulting relationship with: None. Please click here for more information.

3) Statements and opinions expressed are the opinions of the author and not of Streetwise Reports or its officers. The author is wholly responsible for the validity of the statements. The author was not paid by Streetwise Reports for this article. Streetwise Reports was not paid by the author to publish or syndicate this article. Streetwise Reports requires contributing authors to disclose any shareholdings in, or economic relationships with, companies that they write about. Streetwise Reports relies upon the authors to accurately provide this information and Streetwise Reports has no means of verifying its accuracy.

4) This article does not constitute investment advice. Each reader is encouraged to consult with his or her individual financial professional and any action a reader takes as a result of information presented here is his or her own responsibility. By opening this page, each reader accepts and agrees to Streetwise Reports’ terms of use and full legal disclaimer. This article is not a solicitation for investment. Streetwise Reports does not render general or specific investment advice and the information on Streetwise Reports should not be considered a recommendation to buy or sell any security. Streetwise Reports does not endorse or recommend the business, products, services or securities of any company mentioned on Streetwise Reports.

5) From time to time, Streetwise Reports LLC and its directors, officers, employees or members of their families, as well as persons interviewed for articles and interviews on the site, may have a long or short position in securities mentioned. Directors, officers, employees or members of their immediate families are prohibited from making purchases and/or sales of those securities in the open market or otherwise from the time of the decision to publish an article until three business days after the publication of the article. The foregoing prohibition does not apply to articles that in substance only restate previously published company releases. As of the date of this article, officers and/or employees of Streetwise Reports LLC (including members of their household) own securities of Argentina Lithium & Energy Corp., a company mentioned in this article.

Weekly COT Bonds Speculator Changes led by Eurodollar and 2-Year Bond

By InvestMacro

Here are the latest charts and statistics for the Commitment of Traders (COT) reports data published by the Commodities Futures Trading Commission (CFTC).

The latest COT data is updated through Tuesday October 4th and shows a quick view of how large traders (for-profit speculators and commercial hedgers) were positioned in the futures markets.

Weekly Speculator Changes led by Eurodollar and 2-Year Bond

The COT bond market speculator bets were mixed this week as four out of the eight bond markets we cover had higher positioning this week while four markets had lower contracts.

Leading the gains for the bond markets was the Eurodollar (72,027 contracts) with the 2-Year Bond (13,743 contracts), the Ultra US Bond (5,084 contracts) and the Long US Bond (2,987 contracts) also showing a positive week.

The bond markets leading the declines in speculator bets this week was the Fed Funds (-109,287 contracts) with the 5-Year Bond (-41,066 contracts), the Ultra 10-Year (-22,331 contracts) and the 10-Year Bond (-1,680 contracts) also registering lower bets on the week.


Data Snapshot of Bond Market Traders | Columns Legend
Oct-04-2022OIOI-IndexSpec-NetSpec-IndexCom-NetCOM-IndexSmalls-NetSmalls-Index
Eurodollar8,226,0750-2,087,748152,343,91183-256,16348
FedFunds1,516,16843-6,8043924,90863-18,10414
2-Year1,963,4798-306,13420394,72791-88,59312
Long T-Bond1,213,68047-96,5525368,2683528,28475
10-Year3,850,49454-366,87217416,62871-49,75668
5-Year3,995,72551-483,03212625,17389-142,14142

 


US Treasury Bond remains highest in Strength Scores

Strength Scores (a normalized measure of Speculator positions over a 3-Year range, from 0 to 100 where above 80 is extreme bullish and below 20 is extreme bearish) show that the US Treasury Bond (53.2 percent) leads the bonds markets currently and is the only market with a score above 50 percent (3-Year midpoint of range). The Fed Funds (38.8 percent) comes in as the next highest bonds market in strength scores.

On the downside, the Ultra 10-Year Bond (7.4 percent) comes in at the lowest strength level currently and is followed by the 5-Year Bond (12.5 percent), the Eurodollar (14.7 percent) and the 10-Year Bond (16.7 percent). All of these markets are currently in bearish extreme levels with scores below 20 percent.


Strength Statistics:
Fed Funds (38.8 percent) vs Fed Funds previous week (52.3 percent)
2-Year Bond (20.4 percent) vs 2-Year Bond previous week (17.7 percent)
5-Year Bond (12.5 percent) vs 5-Year Bond previous week (18.7 percent)
10-Year Bond (16.7 percent) vs 10-Year Bond previous week (16.9 percent)
Ultra 10-Year Bond (7.4 percent) vs Ultra 10-Year Bond previous week (13.3 percent)
US Treasury Bond (53.2 percent) vs US Treasury Bond previous week (52.2 percent)
Ultra US Treasury Bond (31.5 percent) vs Ultra US Treasury Bond previous week (29.4 percent)
Eurodollar (14.7 percent) vs Eurodollar previous week (13.4 percent)

Strength Trends led by Eurodollar

Strength Score Trends (or move index, calculates the 6-week changes in strength scores) show that the Eurodollar (14.6 percent) leads the past six weeks trends for bonds this week. The 5-Year Bond (3.1 percent) and the 10-Year Bond (2.2 percent) fill out the other positive movers in the latest trends data.

The US Treasury Bond (-16.0 percent) leads the downside trend scores currently while the next markets with lower trend scores were the Ultra 10-Year Bond (-14.8 percent), Fed Funds (-13.5 percent) and the 2-Year Bond (-13.1 percent).


Strength Trend Statistics:
Fed Funds (-13.5 percent) vs Fed Funds previous week (1.7 percent)
2-Year Bond (-13.1 percent) vs 2-Year Bond previous week (-21.4 percent)
5-Year Bond (3.1 percent) vs 5-Year Bond previous week (3.8 percent)
10-Year Bond (2.2 percent) vs 10-Year Bond previous week (-0.3 percent)
Ultra 10-Year Bond (-14.8 percent) vs Ultra 10-Year Bond previous week (-7.2 percent)
US Treasury Bond (-16.0 percent) vs US Treasury Bond previous week (-16.9 percent)
Ultra US Treasury Bond (-0.2 percent) vs Ultra US Treasury Bond previous week (-2.9 percent)
Eurodollar (14.6 percent) vs Eurodollar previous week (13.1 percent)


Individual Markets:

3-Month Eurodollars Futures:

Eurodollar Bonds Futures COT ChartThe 3-Month Eurodollars large speculator standing this week equaled a net position of -2,087,748 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly gain of 72,027 contracts from the previous week which had a total of -2,159,775 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bearish-Extreme with a score of 14.7 percent. The commercials are Bullish-Extreme with a score of 83.0 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bearish with a score of 48.1 percent.

3-Month Eurodollars StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:8.268.24.9
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:33.639.78.0
– Net Position:-2,087,7482,343,911-256,163
– Gross Longs:674,3655,606,961401,184
– Gross Shorts:2,762,1133,263,050657,347
– Long to Short Ratio:0.2 to 11.7 to 10.6 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):14.783.048.1
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):Bearish-ExtremeBullish-ExtremeBearish
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:14.6-15.517.5

 


30-Day Federal Funds Futures:

Federal Funds 30-Day Bonds Futures COT ChartThe 30-Day Federal Funds large speculator standing this week equaled a net position of -6,804 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly decrease of -109,287 contracts from the previous week which had a total of 102,483 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bearish with a score of 38.8 percent. The commercials are Bullish with a score of 62.9 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bearish-Extreme with a score of 13.5 percent.

30-Day Federal Funds StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:10.074.51.7
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:10.572.82.9
– Net Position:-6,80424,908-18,104
– Gross Longs:151,7591,129,09825,617
– Gross Shorts:158,5631,104,19043,721
– Long to Short Ratio:1.0 to 11.0 to 10.6 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):38.862.913.5
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):BearishBullishBearish-Extreme
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:-13.514.8-31.0

 


2-Year Treasury Note Futures:

2-Year Treasury Bonds Futures COT ChartThe 2-Year Treasury Note large speculator standing this week equaled a net position of -306,134 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly rise of 13,743 contracts from the previous week which had a total of -319,877 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bearish with a score of 20.4 percent. The commercials are Bullish-Extreme with a score of 91.5 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bearish-Extreme with a score of 12.5 percent.

2-Year Treasury Note StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:7.982.38.0
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:23.562.212.5
– Net Position:-306,134394,727-88,593
– Gross Longs:154,3211,616,300156,188
– Gross Shorts:460,4551,221,573244,781
– Long to Short Ratio:0.3 to 11.3 to 10.6 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):20.491.512.5
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):BearishBullish-ExtremeBearish-Extreme
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:-13.117.6-11.1

 


5-Year Treasury Note Futures:

5-Year Treasury Bonds Futures COT ChartThe 5-Year Treasury Note large speculator standing this week equaled a net position of -483,032 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly decrease of -41,066 contracts from the previous week which had a total of -441,966 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bearish-Extreme with a score of 12.5 percent. The commercials are Bullish-Extreme with a score of 89.5 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bearish with a score of 41.9 percent.

5-Year Treasury Note StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:5.985.77.4
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:18.070.111.0
– Net Position:-483,032625,173-142,141
– Gross Longs:234,4183,425,691296,148
– Gross Shorts:717,4502,800,518438,289
– Long to Short Ratio:0.3 to 11.2 to 10.7 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):12.589.541.9
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):Bearish-ExtremeBullish-ExtremeBearish
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:3.1-1.4-2.6

 


10-Year Treasury Note Futures:

10-Year Treasury Notes Bonds Futures COT ChartThe 10-Year Treasury Note large speculator standing this week equaled a net position of -366,872 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly lowering of -1,680 contracts from the previous week which had a total of -365,192 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bearish-Extreme with a score of 16.7 percent. The commercials are Bullish with a score of 71.4 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bullish with a score of 68.2 percent.

10-Year Treasury Note StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:9.779.08.8
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:19.268.210.1
– Net Position:-366,872416,628-49,756
– Gross Longs:373,6343,041,673340,013
– Gross Shorts:740,5062,625,045389,769
– Long to Short Ratio:0.5 to 11.2 to 10.9 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):16.771.468.2
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):Bearish-ExtremeBullishBullish
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:2.2-9.515.6

 


Ultra 10-Year Notes Futures:

Ultra 10-Year Treasury Notes Bonds Futures COT ChartThe Ultra 10-Year Notes large speculator standing this week equaled a net position of -82,091 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly lowering of -22,331 contracts from the previous week which had a total of -59,760 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bearish-Extreme with a score of 7.4 percent. The commercials are Bullish-Extreme with a score of 83.3 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bullish with a score of 70.2 percent.

Ultra 10-Year Notes StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:6.282.111.0
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:12.369.817.3
– Net Position:-82,091167,665-85,574
– Gross Longs:84,1831,113,708149,111
– Gross Shorts:166,274946,043234,685
– Long to Short Ratio:0.5 to 11.2 to 10.6 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):7.483.370.2
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):Bearish-ExtremeBullish-ExtremeBullish
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:-14.88.316.1

 


US Treasury Bonds Futures:

US Year Treasury Notes Long Bonds Futures COT ChartThe US Treasury Bonds large speculator standing this week equaled a net position of -96,552 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly rise of 2,987 contracts from the previous week which had a total of -99,539 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bullish with a score of 53.2 percent. The commercials are Bearish with a score of 35.0 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bullish with a score of 75.0 percent.

US Treasury Bonds StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:5.978.314.2
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:13.872.711.9
– Net Position:-96,55268,26828,284
– Gross Longs:71,317950,661172,811
– Gross Shorts:167,869882,393144,527
– Long to Short Ratio:0.4 to 11.1 to 11.2 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):53.235.075.0
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):BullishBearishBullish
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:-16.016.81.7

 


Ultra US Treasury Bonds Futures:

Ultra US Year Treasury Notes Long Bonds Futures COT ChartThe Ultra US Treasury Bonds large speculator standing this week equaled a net position of -376,823 contracts in the data reported through Tuesday. This was a weekly advance of 5,084 contracts from the previous week which had a total of -381,907 net contracts.

This week’s current strength score (the trader positioning range over the past three years, measured from 0 to 100) shows the speculators are currently Bearish with a score of 31.5 percent. The commercials are Bullish with a score of 71.5 percent and the small traders (not shown in chart) are Bullish with a score of 69.0 percent.

Ultra US Treasury Bonds StatisticsSPECULATORSCOMMERCIALSSMALL TRADERS
– Percent of Open Interest Longs:4.883.311.4
– Percent of Open Interest Shorts:31.660.57.3
– Net Position:-376,823320,05856,765
– Gross Longs:66,9111,169,527159,344
– Gross Shorts:443,734849,469102,579
– Long to Short Ratio:0.2 to 11.4 to 11.6 to 1
NET POSITION TREND:
– Strength Index Score (3 Year Range Pct):31.571.569.0
– Strength Index Reading (3 Year Range):BearishBullishBullish
NET POSITION MOVEMENT INDEX:
– 6-Week Change in Strength Index:-0.2-7.110.8

 


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*COT Report: The COT data, released weekly to the public each Friday, is updated through the most recent Tuesday (data is 3 days old) and shows a quick view of how large speculators or non-commercials (for-profit traders) were positioned in the futures markets.

The CFTC categorizes trader positions according to commercial hedgers (traders who use futures contracts for hedging as part of the business), non-commercials (large traders who speculate to realize trading profits) and nonreportable traders (usually small traders/speculators) as well as their open interest (contracts open in the market at time of reporting). See CFTC criteria here.