|
 |
|
Ask a Broker |
Email this to a Friend |
|
Monday,
October 06, 2008 - Weekly e-Newsletter - Issue No. 323 |
|
Economic Calendar |
|
Date |
ET |
Release |
For |
Consensus |
Prior |
|
Oct 07 |
14:00 |
FOMC Minutes |
Sep 16 |
|
|
|
Oct 07 |
15:00 |
Consumer
Credit |
Aug |
$5.5B |
$4.6B |
|
Oct 08 |
10:00 |
Pending Home
Sales |
Aug |
-1.0% |
-3.2% |
|
Oct 08 |
10:35 |
Crude
Inventories |
10/04 |
NA |
NA |
|
Oct 09 |
08:30 |
Initial
Claims |
10/04 |
NA |
NA |
|
Oct 09 |
10:00 |
Wholesale
Inventories |
Aug |
0.4% |
1.4% |
|
Oct 10 |
08:30 |
Export Prices
ex-ag. |
Sep |
NA |
NA |
|
Oct 10 |
08:30 |
Import Prices
ex-oil |
Sep |
NA |
NA |
|
Oct 10 |
08:30 |
Trade Balance |
Aug |
-$60.0B |
-$62.2B |
|
|
[View the complete international
economic calendar]
[back to top] |
|
E-Mini Futures Commentary |
|
-Andrey
Korchnoy, CTA, Sr. Systems Analyst |
|
U.S.
stocks fell the most since the September 2001 terrorist
attacks. Concern that tightening credit markets will
prolong an economic slowdown overshadowed the passage of
a $700 billion financial-market rescue package. The
declines this week extended the S&P 500's slide for 2008
to 25 percent which was led by financial companies after
credit losses stemming from the nationwide drop in home
prices exceeded $588 billion.
[read more]
[back to top] |
|
Gold Futures Commentary |
|
-Trenton
Kimminau, Margins Analyst/Futures Broker |
|
Gold futures saw a considerable amount
of selling pressure this week with December futures
closing down $55.30 per ounce. Gold was strong on
Monday, and prices hit a weekly high at 920.2 during
Tuesday’s trading. Prices soon fell to support levels as
the Dollar saw a sharp rally on Tuesday which continued
on to Wednesday and Thursday. The Dollar did experience
some pressure on Thursday with the release of factory
orders numbers form the Commerce Department. Orders for
manufactured good were down by 4 % in August which was
the largest drop in factory orders since October 2001.
Friday the House approved the $700 billion bail-out
plan. The Stock market had been trading higher leading
up to the House vote but even once the bill was
approved, Dow Jones index futures closed with a loss of
193 points on the day. Gold Futures settled for the week
at 833.2.
[read more]
[back to top] |
|
Currency Futures Overview |
|
- Andrey
Korchnoy, CTA/Sr. Systems Analyst |
|
The euro slid to a 13-month low against the dollar as
European governments rushed to support financial
institutions in the region hit by the widening global
credit crisis. Canada's currency posted the biggest
weekly slump since at least 1971 as commodity prices
plummet in the wake of the global financial crisis and
investors buy U.S. dollars. The pound dropped the most
in a week versus the dollar since 1992 after U.K.
services contracted the most in at least 12 years,
fueling speculation the economy may already be in a
recession and the Bank of England will cut interest
rates soon.
[read more]
[back to top] |
|
Crude Oil Futures Overview |
|
-Andrey
Korchnoy, CTA, Sr. Systems Analyst |
|
Crude oil
fell for a fourth day in New York on signs slowing
global economic growth will reduce demand. World markets
are oversupplied and the Organization of Petroleum
Exporting Countries may review output levels for the
first quarter of 2009.
[read more]
[back to top]
 |
|
Automated Trading System
Results |
Hypothetical Performance
Results from ITTI,
Our Featured Automated Systems
Vendor
Top Futures Systems of
the Last 12 Months
|
System |
Market |
Annual
% Return |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Top FOREX Systems of
the Last 12 Months
|
System |
Market |
Annual
% Return |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
Top Futures Systems of
the Month
|
System |
Market |
Monthly
% Return |
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
RetourForce
|
|
|
Click on any of the above
systems to view complete
report.
Please note past performance
does not guarantee future
results and no such claims are
being made or implied. There is
a risk of loss in futures, forex
and systems trading. All demo
accounts used to display the
performance results of these
trade recommendations for use in
conveying to you the value of
the system and all trading
records presented on this
website are hypothetical. The
systems performance shown above
does not consider systems
subscription fees and includes
$25 allowance per trade for
slippage, commissions and fees.
The annual % return is
calculated based on the net
return. The net return is
calculated as gross - $25
allowance for commissions and
fees. Results updated
9/21/2008.
|
|
|
|
Market News - Oct. 03, 2008
-Devin Brady, Sr. Market Strategist |
|
Energy
Crude oil fell more than 12-percent this
week, with the November contract sliding
$13.01 to settle at $93.88 a barrel.
Concerns that weakening economic data
will result in further demand
destruction, combined with strength in
the U.S. dollar set the stage for an
ugly week in oil.
The Commerce Department reported a steep
decline of 4-percent in factory orders
for August, well above the 2.5-percent
drop analysts expected. August marked
the largest decline since falling
4.8-percent in October of 2006.
On Thursday, The Labor Department
reported that initial jobless claims
increased by 1,000 climbing to a
seasonally adjusted 497,000,
considerably above analyst expectations
of 475,000. Jobless claims reached the
highest level since just after the
terrorist attacks on Sept. 11 seven
years ago.
The EIA reported that U.S. inventories
of crude oil rose 4.28 million barrels
to 294.5 million last week, well above
analysts 2.5 million barrel estimate.
Refinery utilization increased
5.6-percent to 72.3-percent after storms
reduced supplies last month.
Natural gas futures fell 3.5-percent on
the week, with the November contract
settling at $7.358 a million British
thermal units. A larger than expected
build of inventories, combined with
overall commodity weakness was noted for
the decline.
The U.S. Energy Information
Administration reported a build of 87
billion cubic feet of natural gas last
week, well above the 78 bcf injection
analysts were anticipating.
November reformulated gasoline closed at
$2.2283 a gallon, and November heating
oil settled at $2.662 a gallon.
Grains
Soybeans fell 15-percent on the week,
with the November contract settling
$1.72 lower at $9.92 a bushel. Falling
export sales and estimates for soybean
supplies to grow more than projected
earlier by analysts helped send soybeans
to the lowest level in 11-months.
Soybean stocks in the fourth quarter of
the 2007-08 were estimated at 205
million bushels as of Sept. 1, the USDA
reported. The number came in well above
the analyst expectations for 144 million
bushels with a 140 million bushel carry
out.
U.S. export sales of soybeans came in at
471,000 metric tons in the week ended
Sept. 25, down 23-percent from the
previous week, the USDA reported this
week.
Corn collapsed the most in over
20-years, with the December contract
settling the week 89 cents lower at
$4.54 a bushel. Falling energy prices,
rising value of the dollar, and higher
inventory data helped send corn
20-percent lower on the week.
Corn inventories in the U.S. as of Sept.
1 were pegged at 1.624 billion bushels,
reported the U.S. Department of
Agriculture. Analysts were expecting a
fall of 1.539 billion. The USDA also
predicted a 14-percent decline in demand
for corn feed.
Wheat fell 12-percent on the week, with
the December contract settling 78 cents
lower at 640 1/4 a bushel. Fund
liquidations, and pressure from the
global equity markets was noted for some
of the decline on the week.
Metals
Gold closed the week 7-percent lower,
with the December contract shedding
$59.60 at $828.90 an ounce. Gold started
the week higher as a flight to safety
before the falling energy markets, and
the strength in the U.S. dollar gave the
bears more ammo. December silver settled
the week $2.15 lower at $11.36 an ounce.
The U.S. Senate and House approval of
the $700 billion bailout plan sent the
dollar significantly higher, reducing
the appeal of precious metals as a
flight-to-safety. The U.S. dollar
climbed to the highest level in
13-months this week.
Copper was slammed by 14-percent this
week, with the December contract
settling over 38 cents lower at $2.69 a
pound. Lower housing and auto sales have
sent base metals in a tailspin. Copper
is at an 18-month low, and platinum and
palladium, that is used in new cars, are
down over a third on the year.
The U.S. government’s existing home
sales report showed sales of previously
owned homes crumbled more than expected
last month in the U.S., with the median
price sliding the most on record.
Softs
Coffee fell to a fresh yearly low, with
the December contract settling 12 cents
lower on the week at $1.2205 a pound.
Rising inventories, a slowdown in the
global economy, and a rise in the value
of the U.S. dollar was noted for much of
10-percent loss for the week.
U.S. coffee inventories have climbed
2.3-percent to 4.57 million bags.
Brazil, the world's largest grower of
the bean, is expected to harvest 51.1
million bags this year, well above last
years 37.6 million, the U.S. Department
of Agriculture forecasted.
Cotton closed 8-percent lower on the
week, settling at 57.41 cents a pound.
Huge inventories and spill-over pressure
from the falling grain market was noted
for December hitting a fresh
contract-low.
Cocoa settled the week 11-percent lower
with the December contract closing at
2469 a metric ton. November orange juice
settled the week 10-percent lower at
82.10 cents a pound.
Meats
Cattle settled the week about 5-percent
lower, with October feeder cattle losing
just over a nickel at 100.67 cents a
pound. Concerns that cash strapped
consumers will rotate into cheaper
proteins continues to weigh on market
sentiment. October live cattle sank to a
fresh contract low settling at 95.60
cents a pound.
The U.S. Department of Agriculture's
midday beef wire for Friday showed
choice cuts were $0.80 per hundredweight
lower, while select items fell by $0.15
per hundredweight.
Hog futures closed the week moderately
lower, with October lean hogs falling
320 points at 66.42 cents a pound. Fund
liquidation continues to weigh on
prices. February pork bellies fell 390
points on the week, settling 94.10 cents
a pound.
|
Contact Us
877.367.3177 USA/Canada
+1.818.728.0415 International
www.GlobalFutures.com





|
We Speak Your Language! |
|
English, Italian, French, German,
Tagalog, Spanish, Armenian, Vietnamese,
Cantonese, Farsi, Swedish, Russian,
Finnish, Portuguese, Danish, Turkish,
Norwegian, Czech, Arabic, Slovak,
Vietnamese, Hebrew, Mandarin, Korean |
|


|
| |
|
Contact Us! |
|
877.367.3177
USA/Canada
+1.818.728.0415
International
www.GlobalFutures.com
For questions regarding this email,
click
here. |
|
|
|
|
**Trading signals
are executed by ITTI signals through ITTI recommended auto
trading platforms.
$300 Day Trading Margins *Requesting for day
trading margins does not indicate a customer’s trading
activity will be more profitable and/or losses will be
limited. Customer acknowledges the high degree of risk
involved in commodity futures and options trading are not
decreased by having liberal day-trading margins, nor does it
guarantee or assume that the customer will make a profit
and/or limit his losses. You should not request for this
promotional item unless you agree that it is suitable for
you. Exchange minimum margins for overnight trading apply.
The $300 day trading margins are only available to PATS
clients. The margins are only valid for up to 20 lots for
clients in the U.S. and up to 10 lots for clients outside of
the U.S. Margins are subject to change without notice.
Please consult your broker for more detailed information.
Additional restrictions may apply.
Free
Live Simulated Trading Account Offer There is no
charge for the 30-day live simulated trading account on our
Global Strategy Trader platform. However, there is a fee in
order to utilize our trading systems and portfolios.
Exchange Fee Program Minimum Account Size $5,000.
CME Membership is valid for Corporation, Limited Liability
Company, Limited Partnership and General Partnership
accounts only. CBOT Memberships are available to individual
and corporate accounts. Subject to approval and availability
by CME & CBOT. Additional restrictions may apply. For more
information, please contact our office.
Automated Trading System Results
Please note past performance does not guarantee future results and no such claims are being made or implied. There is a risk of loss in futures, forex and systems trading. All demo accounts used to display the performance results of these trade recommendations for use in conveying to you the value of the system and all trading records presented on this website are hypothetical. The systems performance shown above does not consider systems subscription fees and includes $25 allowance per trade for slippage, commissions and fees.
All offers are subject to change without notice.
Margins are subject to change without notice. Void
where prohibited. Offers cannot be combined unless
otherwise stated.
RISK DISCLOSURE: Futures trading
contains substantial risk, is not for every trader, and only
risk capital should be used. Any form of trading, including
options, hedging and spreads contains risk. Past performance
is not indicative of future results. Margins are subject to
change without notice. All promotions are subject to change
without notice and void where prohibited.
There is a risk of loss in futures, forex and options
trading. There is risk of loss trading futures, forex and
options online. Please trade with capital you can afford to
lose. Past performance in not necessarily indicative of
future results. Nothing in this site is intended to be a
recommendation to buy or sell any futures or options market.
All information has been obtained from sources, which are
believed to be reliable, but accuracy and thoroughness
cannot be guaranteed. Readers are solely responsible for how
they use the information and for their results. Global
Futures Exchange & Trading Co., Inc. does not guarantee the
accuracy or completeness of the information or any analysis
based thereon.
ITTI Systems Trading Risk Disclosure
There is a risk of loss in futures, forex and options trading. There is risk of loss trading futures, forex and options online. Please trade with capital you can afford to lose. Past performance in not necessarily indicative of future results. Nothing in this site is intended to be a recommendation to buy or sell any futures or options market. All information has been obtained from sources, which are believed to be reliable, but accuracy and thoroughness cannot be guaranteed. Readers are solely responsible for how they use the information and for their results. International Technical Trading Institute, LLC does not guarantee the accuracy or completeness of the information or any analysis based thereon.
Hypothetical performance results have many inherent limitation, some of which are described below. No representation is being made that any account will or is likely to achieve profits or losses similar to those shown. In fact, there are frequently sharp differences between hypothetical performance results and the actual results subsequently achieved by any particular trading program.
One of the limitations of hypothetical performance results is that they are generally prepared with the benefit of hindsight. In addition, hypothetical trading does not involve financial risk, and no hypothetical trading record can completely account for the impact of financial risk in actual trading. For example, the ability to withstand losses or to adhere to a particular trading program in spite of trading losses are material points which can also adversely affect actual trading results. There are numerous other factors related to the markets in general or to the implementation of any specific trading program which cannot be fully account for in the preparation of hypothetical performance results and all of which can adversely affect actual trading results.
International Technical Trading Institute, LLC has had little or no experience in trading actual accounts for itself or for customers. Because there are no actual trading results to compare to the hypothetical performance results customers should be particularly wary of placing undue reliance on these hypothetical performance results.
Commission Rule 4.41(c)(1) applies to "any publication, distribution or broadcast of any report, letter, circular, memorandum, publication, writing, advertisement or other literature…." Commission Rule 4.41(b) prohibits any person from presenting the performance of any simulated or hypothetical futures account or futures interest of a CTA, unless the presentation is accompanied by a disclosure statement. The statement describes the limitations of simulated or hypothetical futures trading as a guide to the performance that a CTA is likely to achieve in actual trading.
Additional Risk Disclosure Document for System Traders: Commission Rule 4.41(b)(1)(I) hypothetical or simulated performance results have certain inherent limitations. Unlike an actual performance record, simulated results do not represent actual trading. Also, since the trades have not actually been executed, the results may have under- or over-compensated for the impact, if any, of certain market factors, such as lack of liquidity. Simulated trading programs in general are also subject to the fact that they are designed with the benefit of hindsight. No representation is being made that any account will or is likely to achieve profits or losses. There have been no promises, guarantees or warranties suggesting that any trading will result in a profit or will not result in a loss. |
|
 |
 |