#11
The Softs Review
For the week of December 19, 2011​

By Jurgens H. Bauer

For the week coffee prices continued downward, making new lows and looking weak. Cocoa prices staged an early week sizable rally when nervous shorts covered after a private report warned of reduced production slated for the Ivory coast. However, cocoa values resumed their move lower again, although managing slight gains for the week.

Sugar prices consolidated with the key feature being the reduction of volatility in option prices. Cotton prices moved sideways to lower.

What to expect in the week ahead? Anticipate resumption of US Dollar strength to pressure values among softs and for markets to be choppy and vulnerable because they will be thin.


***chart courtesy Gecko Softwares Track n Trade Pro
Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results.



The Grains Review
For the week of December 19, 2011​

By Matthew Pierce

Coming back from the weekend there is a modest amount of bullish momentum built up in agriculture. All markets were higher across the board overnight led by beans which is gaining due to expansive dryness in Southern Brazil and central to Northern Argentina. This dryness has many holding their collective breath heading into the holiday with world corn stocks relatively tight while beans have a bit more room but not enough for the world to survive any major production disaster in the southern hemisphere. The one crop not directly threatened is wheat. Argentina is still set on production and India just announced a record 85.93 MMT crop. World wheat stocks are ample and there is only modest concern in the US plains with the current blizzard causing both good and bad results. The possible bullish story for wheat is strictly in Ukraine with some talk of a 30% total loss with another 70% (of the remaining) expected to show very poor quality due to drought and temperature extremes. This adds to the world feed wheat total while making higher protein wheat a continuing issue moving into the final stretch of 2012.

With macros seeming content at current levels there is little direction from outside influences. This allows a small problem in S. America to help oversold daily indicators to bounce. A continuation of Fridays momentum is expected to start the week but sustainability of this move is questioned. Momentum can carry things only so far and markets need a upside move out of the Euro and crude to really light any fire so dont get ahead of yourself with bullish momentum today. The next two weeks could offer a major chop with money flow still the biggest factor into the end of the month.

Spreads to watch include CN12-CZ12 which should continue to tighten in spite of the bullish move. KWH-K is starting to tighten with more bull spread potential as Australian quality tanks. SN12-SX12 showing a 10-cent inverse is questionable with US stocks ample to say the least. I would look for this spread to move to a 10-20 carry in the coming days.

EU Wheat was .75 Euro higher overnight gaining on CME momentum. The trade currently sitting at 178.00 is capped by continual export pressure from Russia and Australia. Reports have China stockpiling corn in the NE province of Jilin at about $356.00 (USD converted from 2,245 Yuan) per metric ton. This program is expected to extend through April 2012.

The Risk On trade into year-end has been widely thrown around and is another possible bullish impact heading into the post Christmas week.


The Energies Review
For the week of December 19, 2011​

By Daniel Cronin

The energy complex took a dive with the bad news coming out of Europe as both WTI and Brent sank to new monthly lows. Jan WTI crossing below $93.00 and Feb Brent below $103. I believe the markets are a bit oversold here and will look to bounce up this week as the markets quiet down for the holiday week. Look for WTI to trade back above $95.


The Metals Review
For the week of December 19, 2011​

By Daniel Cronin

Precious metals got hit real hard this past week as Feb gold traded all the way down to $1,560 and March silver took a dive below $30. Again I believe this is an oversold market and with Feb gold having huge potential support at $1,540, I would look to play from the long side with OTM calls.


***chart courtesy Gecko Softwares Track n Trade Pro
Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results.


Disclaimer: Past performance is not indicative of future results. Trading futures and options involves substantial risk of loss and is not suitable for all investors. Fundamental factors, seasonal and weather trends, daily news, and other current events may have already been factored into the markets. The use of stop loss or contingent orders may not protect profits and may not limit losses to the amount intended. Certain market conditions make it difficult or impossible to execute such orders.
 

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