OCT 31 FRIDAY
SHORT TERM TREND : SIDEWAYS
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
S1 RS 316 , S2 RS 311
R1 RS 323 , R2 RS 328
STAY SHORT AT RESISTENCE.
We are also now on Twitter
Follow us on Twitter
If you need any technical support you can Tweet to us at
Friday, October 31, 2008
Wednesday, October 29, 2008
UPDATES ON OCT 29 2008
OCT 29 WEDNESDAY
SHORT TERM TREND : SIDEWAYS
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
S1 RS 315.30 , S2 RS 311
R1 RS 320 , R2 RS 324
Natural Gas Gains as Snow Forecast for U.S. East
Spurs Demand .
Natural gas futures advanced in New York as forecasts for
snow in parts of the eastern U.S. signaled higher demand
for the heating fuel.
Natural gas for November delivery gained 6.5 cents, or 1.1
percent, to settle at $6.186 per million British thermal units
at 2:57 p.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The
November contract expires tomorrow. Gas has dropped
17 percent this year.
The December futures contract rose 7.6 cents, or 1.2 percent,
to $6.416 per million Btu.
Lower temperatures will trim the amount of gas available to
go into storage as demand for the fuel to run furnaces increases.
About 52 percent of U.S. homes rely on gas for heat, according
to the U.S. Energy Department.
Stockpiles advanced 70 billion cubic feet in the week ended
Oct. 17 to 3.347 trillion cubic feet, the Energy Department
said last week. Supplies probably increased 40 billion
cubic feet in the week ended Oct. 24, according to the
median of six analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg.
Gas and crude oil rose in earlier trading as stock markets rallied.
SHORT TERM TREND : SIDEWAYS
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
S1 RS 315.30 , S2 RS 311
R1 RS 320 , R2 RS 324
Natural Gas Gains as Snow Forecast for U.S. East
Spurs Demand .
Natural gas futures advanced in New York as forecasts for
snow in parts of the eastern U.S. signaled higher demand
for the heating fuel.
Natural gas for November delivery gained 6.5 cents, or 1.1
percent, to settle at $6.186 per million British thermal units
at 2:57 p.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange. The
November contract expires tomorrow. Gas has dropped
17 percent this year.
The December futures contract rose 7.6 cents, or 1.2 percent,
to $6.416 per million Btu.
Lower temperatures will trim the amount of gas available to
go into storage as demand for the fuel to run furnaces increases.
About 52 percent of U.S. homes rely on gas for heat, according
to the U.S. Energy Department.
Stockpiles advanced 70 billion cubic feet in the week ended
Oct. 17 to 3.347 trillion cubic feet, the Energy Department
said last week. Supplies probably increased 40 billion
cubic feet in the week ended Oct. 24, according to the
median of six analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg.
Gas and crude oil rose in earlier trading as stock markets rallied.
Friday, October 24, 2008
UPDATES ON OCT 24 2008
OCT 24 FRIDAY
SHORT TERM TREND : SIDEWAYS
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
S1 RS 330.60 , S2 RS 328
R1 RS 338 , R2 RS 342
WAIT FOR CONFIRMATION.
SHORT TERM TREND : SIDEWAYS
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
S1 RS 330.60 , S2 RS 328
R1 RS 338 , R2 RS 342
WAIT FOR CONFIRMATION.
Thursday, October 23, 2008
UPDATES
TECHNICALS FOR OCTOBER 23
MCX OCTOBER NATURAL GAS
SHORT TERM TREND : BEARISH
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
SUPPORTS; 347.5, 343
RESISTANCES 353, 357
STAY SHORT AT RESISTANCES
MCX OCTOBER NATURAL GAS
SHORT TERM TREND : BEARISH
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
SUPPORTS; 347.5, 343
RESISTANCES 353, 357
STAY SHORT AT RESISTANCES
Wednesday, October 22, 2008
updates
TECHNICALS FOR OCTOBER 22
MCX OCTOBER NATURAL GAS
SHORT TERM TREND : SIDEWAYS
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
SUPPORTS : 345.50, 336
RESISTANCES : 351, 356
WAIT FOR CONFIRMATION
MCX OCTOBER NATURAL GAS
SHORT TERM TREND : SIDEWAYS
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
SUPPORTS : 345.50, 336
RESISTANCES : 351, 356
WAIT FOR CONFIRMATION
Tuesday, October 21, 2008
UPDATES
TECHNICALS FOR OCTOBER 21
MCX OCTOBER NATURAL GAS
SHORT TERM TREND :: SIDEWAYS
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
SUPPORTS : S1 330.50 , S2 326
RESISTANCES : R1 336, R2 340
GO SHORT AT RESISTANCES
MCX OCTOBER NATURAL GAS
SHORT TERM TREND :: SIDEWAYS
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
SUPPORTS : S1 330.50 , S2 326
RESISTANCES : R1 336, R2 340
GO SHORT AT RESISTANCES
Monday, October 20, 2008
UPDATES ON OCT 20 2008
OCT 20 MONDAY
SHORT TERM TREND : SIDEWAYS
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
S1 RS 333.50 , S2 RS 329
R1 RS 340 , R2 RS 344
STAY SHORT AT RESISTENCE.
SHORT TERM TREND : SIDEWAYS
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
S1 RS 333.50 , S2 RS 329
R1 RS 340 , R2 RS 344
STAY SHORT AT RESISTENCE.
Friday, October 17, 2008
UPDATES ON OCT 17 2008
OCT 17 FRIDAY
SHORT TERM TREND : SIDEWAYS
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
S1 RS 330.30 , S2 RS 327
R1 RS 336 , R2 RS 339
WAIT FOR CONFIRMATION.
Gasoline stockpiles climbed 6.97 million barrels to 193.8 million
barrels in the week ended Oct. 10, the report showed. Supplies
were forecast to rise 3 million barrels, according to the
Bloomberg survey.
SHORT TERM TREND : SIDEWAYS
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
S1 RS 330.30 , S2 RS 327
R1 RS 336 , R2 RS 339
WAIT FOR CONFIRMATION.
Gasoline stockpiles climbed 6.97 million barrels to 193.8 million
barrels in the week ended Oct. 10, the report showed. Supplies
were forecast to rise 3 million barrels, according to the
Bloomberg survey.
Thursday, October 16, 2008
UPDATES ON OCT 16 2008
OCT 16 THURSDAY
SHORT TERM TREND : BEARISH
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
S1 RS 321 , S2 RS 318
R1 RS 327 , R2 RS 330
STAY SHORT AT RESISTENCE.
Natural Gas Falls on Concern Demand to Wane in
Slowing Economy .
Natural gas futures in New York fell for the first time in three
days on concern U.S. demand will weaken in a slowing economy.
Natural gas for November delivery fell 13.5 cents, or 2
percent, to settle at $6.592 per million British thermal
units at 2:59 p.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Prices are down 11 percent from a year ago and touched
a one-year low of $6.535 per million Btu on Oct. 10.
U.S. gas storage levels probably rose 80 billion cubic feet in
the week ended Oct. 10, according to the median of 13
analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. The average
change for the period is a gain of 63 billion.
Above-normal temperatures for much of the country are
expected through Oct. 24, the Climate Prediction Center in
Camp Springs, Maryland, said in a 10-day forecast released
yesterday.
SHORT TERM TREND : BEARISH
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
S1 RS 321 , S2 RS 318
R1 RS 327 , R2 RS 330
STAY SHORT AT RESISTENCE.
Natural Gas Falls on Concern Demand to Wane in
Slowing Economy .
Natural gas futures in New York fell for the first time in three
days on concern U.S. demand will weaken in a slowing economy.
Natural gas for November delivery fell 13.5 cents, or 2
percent, to settle at $6.592 per million British thermal
units at 2:59 p.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Prices are down 11 percent from a year ago and touched
a one-year low of $6.535 per million Btu on Oct. 10.
U.S. gas storage levels probably rose 80 billion cubic feet in
the week ended Oct. 10, according to the median of 13
analyst estimates compiled by Bloomberg. The average
change for the period is a gain of 63 billion.
Above-normal temperatures for much of the country are
expected through Oct. 24, the Climate Prediction Center in
Camp Springs, Maryland, said in a 10-day forecast released
yesterday.
Wednesday, October 15, 2008
UPDATES ON OCT 15 2008
OCT 15 WEDNESDAY
SHORT TERM TREND : BEARISH
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
S1 RS 323 ,S2 RS 320
R1 RS 329 , R2 RS 332
STAY SHORT AT RESISTENCE.
SHORT TERM TREND : BEARISH
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
S1 RS 323 ,S2 RS 320
R1 RS 329 , R2 RS 332
STAY SHORT AT RESISTENCE.
Tuesday, October 14, 2008
UPDATES ON OCT 14 2008
OCT 14 TUESDAY
SHORT TERM TREND : BEARISH
LONG TERM TREND : BEARSH
S1 RS 320 , S2 RS 316
R1 RS 326 , R2 RS 331
STAY SHORT AT RESISTENCE.
U.S. oil and gasoline inventories probably rose last week as
production increased and refineries opened units that were
shut last month because of Hurricanes Gustav and Ike, a
Bloomberg News survey of analysts showed.
Gasoline stockpiles probably rose 3 million barrels last week, from
186.8 million barrels the week before, according to the survey.
Supplies of distillate fuel, a category that includes heating oil
and diesel, probably gained 500,000 barrels from 122.6
million barrels.
SHORT TERM TREND : BEARISH
LONG TERM TREND : BEARSH
S1 RS 320 , S2 RS 316
R1 RS 326 , R2 RS 331
STAY SHORT AT RESISTENCE.
U.S. oil and gasoline inventories probably rose last week as
production increased and refineries opened units that were
shut last month because of Hurricanes Gustav and Ike, a
Bloomberg News survey of analysts showed.
Gasoline stockpiles probably rose 3 million barrels last week, from
186.8 million barrels the week before, according to the survey.
Supplies of distillate fuel, a category that includes heating oil
and diesel, probably gained 500,000 barrels from 122.6
million barrels.
Monday, October 13, 2008
UPDATES ON OCT 13 2008
OCT 13 MONDAY
SHORT TERM TREND : BEARISH
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
S1 RS 322 , S2 RS 318
R1 RS 327 , R2 RS 331
STAY SHORT AT RESISTENCE.
SHORT TERM TREND : BEARISH
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
S1 RS 322 , S2 RS 318
R1 RS 327 , R2 RS 331
STAY SHORT AT RESISTENCE.
Friday, October 10, 2008
UPDATE
MCX NATURAL GAS OCTOBER
SHORT TERM TREND : BEARISH
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
SUPPORTS ; S1 324 S2 316
RESISTANCES : R1 332 R2 338
STAY SHORT AT RESISTANCES
SHORT TERM TREND : BEARISH
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
SUPPORTS ; S1 324 S2 316
RESISTANCES : R1 332 R2 338
STAY SHORT AT RESISTANCES
Wednesday, October 8, 2008
UPDATES ON OCT 8 2008
OCT 8 WEDNESDAY
SHORT TERM TREND : BEARISH
LONG TERM TREND ; BEARISH
S1 RS 326 , S2 RS 323
R1 RS 331 , R2 RS 334
STAY SHORT AT RESISTENCE.
Natural Gas Futures Decline on Concern of Decreasing Demand .
Natural gas fell in New York on concern that measures
from central banks to prop up economies around the
world won't be enough to prevent further slowing.
Natural gas, crude and gasoline had surged, with oil rising
as much as 6 percent, after Australia's central bank cut its
benchmark interest rate the most in 16 years and the
Federal Reserve acted to boost short-term lending.
Natural gas for November delivery fell 6.7 cents, or 0.9
percent, to settle at $6.768 per million British thermal
units at 3:08 p.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Gas earlier touched $7.011. The futures have shed 50
percent since reaching a 30-month closing high of
$13.577 per million Btu on July 3.
The Federal Reserve Board today created a special fund to
support the U.S. commercial paper market to prevent a
freeze-up in short-term debt used by companies to finance
operations. The Australian central bank cut interest rates
by 1 percentage point, the biggest drop since 1992, to
reduce borrowing costs.
A slowing economy would cut demand from commercial and
industrial users of gas, which accounted for 9.64 trillion
cubic feet, or 42 percent, of consumption in the U.S. in
2007. Interest rate cuts and money injected by central
banks may ease concern of a significant recession.
Gas in storage probably rose 85 billion cubic feet last
week, according to the median of six analyst estimates
compiled by Bloomberg. The average change for the
period is a gain of 69 billion.
Inventories of natural gas in the week ended Sept. 26 were
3.11 trillion cubic feet, the Energy Department said Oct. 2.
Supplies are expanding at a pace that would put them
slightly above the five-year average of 3.327 trillion
cubic feet at next month's start of the cold-weather
season across much of the U.S.
SHORT TERM TREND : BEARISH
LONG TERM TREND ; BEARISH
S1 RS 326 , S2 RS 323
R1 RS 331 , R2 RS 334
STAY SHORT AT RESISTENCE.
Natural Gas Futures Decline on Concern of Decreasing Demand .
Natural gas fell in New York on concern that measures
from central banks to prop up economies around the
world won't be enough to prevent further slowing.
Natural gas, crude and gasoline had surged, with oil rising
as much as 6 percent, after Australia's central bank cut its
benchmark interest rate the most in 16 years and the
Federal Reserve acted to boost short-term lending.
Natural gas for November delivery fell 6.7 cents, or 0.9
percent, to settle at $6.768 per million British thermal
units at 3:08 p.m. on the New York Mercantile Exchange.
Gas earlier touched $7.011. The futures have shed 50
percent since reaching a 30-month closing high of
$13.577 per million Btu on July 3.
The Federal Reserve Board today created a special fund to
support the U.S. commercial paper market to prevent a
freeze-up in short-term debt used by companies to finance
operations. The Australian central bank cut interest rates
by 1 percentage point, the biggest drop since 1992, to
reduce borrowing costs.
A slowing economy would cut demand from commercial and
industrial users of gas, which accounted for 9.64 trillion
cubic feet, or 42 percent, of consumption in the U.S. in
2007. Interest rate cuts and money injected by central
banks may ease concern of a significant recession.
Gas in storage probably rose 85 billion cubic feet last
week, according to the median of six analyst estimates
compiled by Bloomberg. The average change for the
period is a gain of 69 billion.
Inventories of natural gas in the week ended Sept. 26 were
3.11 trillion cubic feet, the Energy Department said Oct. 2.
Supplies are expanding at a pace that would put them
slightly above the five-year average of 3.327 trillion
cubic feet at next month's start of the cold-weather
season across much of the U.S.
Tuesday, October 7, 2008
TECHNICALS
TECHNICALS FOR OCTOBER 7
MCX NATURAL GAS OCTOBER
SHORT TERM TREND : BEARISH
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
SUPPORTS : S1 331, S2 327
RESISTANCES : R1 335, R2 338
SHORT AT RESISTANCES.
Natural Gas Falls on Commodity Collapse, Adequate Inventories
Natural gas in New York fell for a third day to its lowest
price in almost a year as investors fled commodities on
concern a widening financial crisis will further slow the
economy, cutting energy demand.
Natural gas for November delivery fell 52.3 cents, or 7.1
percent, the biggest decline in a month, to settle at $6.835
per million British thermal units at 2:56 p.m. on the New
York Mercantile Exchange. Gas was last below $7 per
million Btu on Dec. 27 and hasn't been this low since
Oct. 23, 2007. The futures have shed 50 percent since
reaching a 30-month closing high of $13.577 per
million Btu on July 3.
Other energy futures, including crude oil and heating oil,
tumbled. Crude fell as the German government pledged
$68 billion to bail out Hypo Real Estate Holding AG,
suggesting a broader crisis might cripple world markets.
Oil for November delivery fell $6.07, or 6.5 percent, to
$87.81 a barrel. Earlier it declined to $87.80, the lowest
since Feb. 7.
Inventories of natural gas gained 87 billion cubic feet in the
week ended Sept. 26 to 3.11 trillion cubic feet, the Energy
Department said Oct. 2. Analysts had forecast a 73 billion-
cubic-foot advance.
In addition to higher storage, natural gas output is forecast to
expand 8 percent in 2008 from a year earlier, boosting supplies,
according to the Energy Department.
MCX NATURAL GAS OCTOBER
SHORT TERM TREND : BEARISH
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
SUPPORTS : S1 331, S2 327
RESISTANCES : R1 335, R2 338
SHORT AT RESISTANCES.
Natural Gas Falls on Commodity Collapse, Adequate Inventories
Natural gas in New York fell for a third day to its lowest
price in almost a year as investors fled commodities on
concern a widening financial crisis will further slow the
economy, cutting energy demand.
Natural gas for November delivery fell 52.3 cents, or 7.1
percent, the biggest decline in a month, to settle at $6.835
per million British thermal units at 2:56 p.m. on the New
York Mercantile Exchange. Gas was last below $7 per
million Btu on Dec. 27 and hasn't been this low since
Oct. 23, 2007. The futures have shed 50 percent since
reaching a 30-month closing high of $13.577 per
million Btu on July 3.
Other energy futures, including crude oil and heating oil,
tumbled. Crude fell as the German government pledged
$68 billion to bail out Hypo Real Estate Holding AG,
suggesting a broader crisis might cripple world markets.
Oil for November delivery fell $6.07, or 6.5 percent, to
$87.81 a barrel. Earlier it declined to $87.80, the lowest
since Feb. 7.
Inventories of natural gas gained 87 billion cubic feet in the
week ended Sept. 26 to 3.11 trillion cubic feet, the Energy
Department said Oct. 2. Analysts had forecast a 73 billion-
cubic-foot advance.
In addition to higher storage, natural gas output is forecast to
expand 8 percent in 2008 from a year earlier, boosting supplies,
according to the Energy Department.
Monday, October 6, 2008
UPDATES ON OCT 6 2008
OCT 6 MONDAY
SHORT TERM TREND : BULLISH : TARGET RS 460
LONG TERM TREND : BULLISH : TARGET RS 520
S1 RS 448 , S2 RS 444 , S3 RS 438
R1 RS 450 , R2 RS 460 , R3 RS 465
PREFER LONG AT RS 448 TO 448.50
STOP LOSS RS 445
TARGET RS 460.
SHORT TERM TREND : BULLISH : TARGET RS 460
LONG TERM TREND : BULLISH : TARGET RS 520
S1 RS 448 , S2 RS 444 , S3 RS 438
R1 RS 450 , R2 RS 460 , R3 RS 465
PREFER LONG AT RS 448 TO 448.50
STOP LOSS RS 445
TARGET RS 460.
Saturday, October 4, 2008
UPDATES ON OCT 4 2008
OCT 4 SATURDAY
Natural Gas Falls a 2nd Day on Adequate Supplies Before Winter .
Natural gas in New York fell for a second day on speculation
supplies will be adequate to meet cold- weather demand
later this year.
Inventories gained 87 billion cubic feet in the week ended
Sept. 26 to 3.11 trillion cubic feet, the Energy Department
said yesterday. Supplies are 1.6 percent above the five-year
average for this time of year. Analysts had forecast a 73 billion
-cubic- foot advance.
Natural gas for November delivery fell 12.3 cents, or 1.6 percent,
to settle at $7.358 per million British thermal units at 2:59 p.m
on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Gas dropped 1.5 percent
this week, the fourth decline in five weeks.
The U.S. House of Representatives today approved a $700
billion government rescue plan for the financial industry to help
ease a credit crunch that threatens the world economy.
The Senate approved the measure two days ago.
A slowing economy would trim industrial demand for gas
supplies. Industrial and commercial demand accounted for
9.64 trillion cubic feet, or 42 percent, of gas consumption in
the U.S. last year, according to the Energy Department.
Hurricanes Ike and Gustav left millions of people without
electricity last month, reducing demand for gas as a fuel
at power plants.
Gas production companies in the Gulf of Mexico have restored
more than half of the offshore region's daily output of 7.4 billion
cubic feet, according to the U.S. Minerals Management Service.
Natural Gas Falls a 2nd Day on Adequate Supplies Before Winter .
Natural gas in New York fell for a second day on speculation
supplies will be adequate to meet cold- weather demand
later this year.
Inventories gained 87 billion cubic feet in the week ended
Sept. 26 to 3.11 trillion cubic feet, the Energy Department
said yesterday. Supplies are 1.6 percent above the five-year
average for this time of year. Analysts had forecast a 73 billion
-cubic- foot advance.
Natural gas for November delivery fell 12.3 cents, or 1.6 percent,
to settle at $7.358 per million British thermal units at 2:59 p.m
on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Gas dropped 1.5 percent
this week, the fourth decline in five weeks.
The U.S. House of Representatives today approved a $700
billion government rescue plan for the financial industry to help
ease a credit crunch that threatens the world economy.
The Senate approved the measure two days ago.
A slowing economy would trim industrial demand for gas
supplies. Industrial and commercial demand accounted for
9.64 trillion cubic feet, or 42 percent, of gas consumption in
the U.S. last year, according to the Energy Department.
Hurricanes Ike and Gustav left millions of people without
electricity last month, reducing demand for gas as a fuel
at power plants.
Gas production companies in the Gulf of Mexico have restored
more than half of the offshore region's daily output of 7.4 billion
cubic feet, according to the U.S. Minerals Management Service.
Friday, October 3, 2008
UPDATES ON OCT 3 2008
OCT 3 FRIDAY
SHORT TERM TREND : BULLISH
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
S1 RS 362 , S2 RS 358
R1 RS 369.60 , R2 RS 373
STAY LONG AT SUPPORT.
U.S. fuel use over the past four weeks averaged 19
million barrels a day, the weakest since October 2001,
an Energy Department report showed earlier this
week. Crude-oil and gasoline inventories increased
last week, the department said.
The U.S. Senate passed a $700 billion financial-market rescue
package loaded with inducements for the House of
Representatives to approve the measure. The House
rejected a version on Sept. 29. The legislative body will
reconsider the Senate's bill today.
The U.S. may fall into a recession as the financial rout deepens,
the International Monetary Fund said in its most pessimistic
outlook for the world's largest economy since the credit
crisis began last year.
SHORT TERM TREND : BULLISH
LONG TERM TREND : BEARISH
S1 RS 362 , S2 RS 358
R1 RS 369.60 , R2 RS 373
STAY LONG AT SUPPORT.
U.S. fuel use over the past four weeks averaged 19
million barrels a day, the weakest since October 2001,
an Energy Department report showed earlier this
week. Crude-oil and gasoline inventories increased
last week, the department said.
The U.S. Senate passed a $700 billion financial-market rescue
package loaded with inducements for the House of
Representatives to approve the measure. The House
rejected a version on Sept. 29. The legislative body will
reconsider the Senate's bill today.
The U.S. may fall into a recession as the financial rout deepens,
the International Monetary Fund said in its most pessimistic
outlook for the world's largest economy since the credit
crisis began last year.
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)