Macro Morning

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Wall Street returned with a bang after its long weekend break with a 2% plus surge across the board in response to the 180 degree spinning top EU Trump tariffs, which should give Asian equities a bounce on the open this morning. Meanwhile the broader selloff in USD was also backed off as Euro pulled back to the 1.13 level while the Australian dollar retraced back below the 65 cent level.

Oil prices remain somewhat weak with Brent crude pushed below the $64USD per barrel level while gold and Bitcoin also retreated water with the shiny metal forced back to the $3300USD per ounce level overnight.

Looking at stock markets from Asia from yesterday’s session, where mainland Chinese share markets fell slightly in the afternoon session with the Shanghai Composite still down 0.2% or so while the Hang Seng Index was up nearly 0.4% as it oscillates around the 23000 point level.

The daily chart shows a near complete fill of the March/April selloff although momentum is now picking up again and remains slightly overbought as the 90 day “relief” continues without any further positive news. Watch for any crack below the low moving average or 23000 point level:

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Japanese stock markets were able to do somewhat better with the Nikkei 225 up more than 0.5% to 37724 points.

Daily price action was looking very keen indeed although daily momentum has slowed down somewhat this week after clearing resistance at the 36000 point level with another equity market that looks stretched and ready to rollover again here. Watch ATR support closely which appears to be firming in recent sessions:

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Australian stocks were able to continue the recent upward momentum with the ASX200 up 0.5% to 8407 points

SPI futures are up nearly 0.6% due to the very strong lead from Wall Street overnight. The daily chart pattern suggests further upside is still possible as the inverted head and shoulders pattern is nearly complete with the RBA cut helping boost this but correlation with other risk markets will come into play here – watch as daily momentum is firming again:

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European markets continued their rebounds on the tariff 180 spin but with smaller moves across the continent as the Eurostoxx 50 Index finished 0.3% higher at 5415 points.

Support at the previous monthly support levels (black line) at 5100 points is now firmly held with the bounce off the 2024 lows at the 4400 point level indicating a massive fill of this dump and pump action with the former February highs nearly complete. A rollover could be forming here so watch for support at the 5200 point level proper:

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Wall Street reopened from the long weekend with a big surge across the board, with the NASDAQ lifting over 2.4% while the S&P500 lifted 2% to close at 5921 points.

The four hourly chart was previously supporting a potential slowdown action here that could be translating to a top on the daily chart as prices gets back above the pre-Trump Tariff Tax day. But this rollover was another orchestrated dump and pump with a BTFD in place:

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Currency markets have been moving against King Dollar amid the tariff volatility and substantial weakening of the US Federal government fiscal situation for sometime now so its no surprise that after the return of US traders from their long weekend and the “pause” in EU tariffs that we see a resurgence. Euro was pushed back to the 1.13 level after briefly breaking through the 1.14 handle at the start of the week but is still at a solid high.

The union currency was pushed back below the 1.13 handle previously but support bounced back at the 2023 and 2024 highs with a breakout above trailing ATR resistance on the four hourly chart as medium term momentum remains quite positive:

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The USDJPY pair retraced all last week to be pushed back below the 143 handle as the ructions around the Japanese sovereign bond market continued to widen but the return of US traders saw a big bid in USD sending the pair well above the 144 level this morning.

I still contend we need to watch for any sustained break below the 139 level which completes a multi year bearish head and shoulders setup that could see the 110 to 120 level revisited. No trade deal is on the horizon either with the 10% baseline still holding but this bounce looks somewhat promising:

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The Australian dollar was oscillating around the 64 cent handle against USD but pushed aside short term resistance to break through the 65 cent level at the start of week but overshot and now retraced back to the mid 64 level on USD resurgence.

Stepping back for a longer point of view (and looking at the trusty AUDNZD weekly cross) price action has crossed back above the 200 day MA (moving black line) after bouncing off a near new five year low. Keep an eye on temporary support at the 63 cent level:

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Oil markets are still trying hard but failing to hold onto the post tariff bounce with Brent crude pushed below the $64USD per barrel level again after failing to make a new weekly high.

The daily chart pattern shows the post New Year rally that got a little out of hand and now reverting back to the sideways lower action for the latter half of 2024. The potential for a return to the 2024 lows is still building here as domestic demand in the US is likely to continue to decline as the Trump Taxes take effect:

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Gold pulled back in the previous session after a series of moves higher last week but its effort on Friday night to move back above the $3350USD per ounce level has been thwarted again overnight, retracing back to the $3300 level proper this morning.

Short term support had firmed immensely in recent sessions showing real strength but momentum became considerably overbought so this was inevitable as price action has reverted back to the uptrend line from the April lows. There is further support at the $3200 level that could be tested next on the overshoot:

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Glossary of Acronyms and Technical Analysis Terms:

ATR: Average True Range – measures the degree of price volatility averaged over a time period

ATR Support/Resistance: a ratcheting mechanism that follows price below/above a trend, that if breached shows above average volatility

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CCI: Commodity Channel Index: a momentum reading that calculates current price away from the statistical mean or “typical” price to indicate overbought (far above the mean) or oversold (far below the mean)

Low/High Moving Average: rolling mean of prices in this case, the low and high for the day/hour which creates a band around the actual price movement

FOMC: Federal Open Market Committee, monthly meeting of Federal Reserve regarding monetary policy (setting interest rates)

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DOE: US Department of Energy 

Uncle Point: or stop loss point, a level at which you’ve clearly been wrong on your position, so cry uncle and get out/wrong on your position, so cry uncle and get out!