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Weekly Market Recap – October 7, 2022

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Weekly Market Recap – October 7, 2022

The U.S. gross national debt exceeded $31 trillion for the first time, nearing the statutory $31.4 trillion ceiling placed by Congress. Saudi Arabia and Russia, the leaders of the OPEC Plus cartel, announced a 2 million bbl. per day production cut, the largest in two years. North Korea escalated its weapons testing program by launching an anti-ballistic missile that flew over Japan, traveling more than 2,800 miles before landing in the ocean. As the statistics from Hurricane Ian’s destruction continue to update, the storm is likely to be one of the nation’s 10 most costly, estimated at between $66 and $71 billion which may impact the U.S. 2022 GDP.

In addition to the national debt figure mentioned above, other economic statistics released during the week, compared with prior levels, were as follows: construction spending -0.7% vs. -0.6%, job openings 10.1 million vs. 11.2 million, job quits 4.2 million vs. 4.1 million, factory orders 0.0% vs. -1.0%, nonfarm payrolls 263,000 vs. 315,000, unemployment rate 3.5% vs. 3.7%, consumer credit $32 billion vs. $26 billion and wholesale inventories, revised for August, were unchanged at 1.3%. The weekly unemployment numbers showed initial jobless claims rising to 219,000 vs. the prior 190,000 and continuing claims rising to 1.36 million from 1.35 million.

On Tuesday, the S&P 500 had its largest one-day advance (+3.1%) since May 2020. That jolt kept many stock investors bullish for only a couple of days, as the benchmarks we report faltered by Friday’s close; the three indices we monitor budged only modestly higher for the week. The S&P 500 rose 1.5% to close at 3,639.66, the Dow Jones Industrial Average settled at 29,296.79 (+2.0%) and the NASDAQ Composite went out at 10,652.40 (+0.7%). CBOE’s VIX had its last print at 31.36 (-0.8%). In currencies, USD Index futures closed the week at 112.683 (+0.5%). OPEC driven oil futures boosted the commodity sector with strong gains, as per S&P’s GSCI, which jumped to 666.73 (+9.7%).

Strength persisted across the board for most of the futures on our metals list. End-of-week results were: gold at $1,709.30 (+2.2%), silver at $20.255 (+6.4%), platinum at $917.90 (+6.8%), palladium at $2,191.30 (+0.4%), copper at $3.3865 (-0.8%) and aluminum at $2,299.00 (+6.3%).

In the energy markets, the petroleum based futures all rose sharply due to OPEC’s bullish news, while the natural gas contracts moved lower. Friday’s closing prices and corresponding percentage moves looked like this: West Texas Intermediate crude at $92.64/bbl. (+16.5%), Brent crude at $97.92 (+15.0%), heating oil at $4.0187 per gallon (+24.7%), gasoline at $2.7346 (+15.4%), NYMEX natural gas at $6.748 per MMBtu (-0.3%), and ICE Dutch gas at €156.207 per MWh (-17.3%).

In the Ag futures markets, the nine products we track were 6 up and 3 down. The gainers were: soybeans at $13.67 (+0.2%), corn at $6.83¼ (+0.8%), sugar at 18.68¢ (+5.7%), cocoa at $2,396 (+1.8%), live cattle at 148.050 (+0.7%) and lean hogs at 77.150 (+1.2%). The contracts that fell into the red were: wheat at $8.80¼ (-4.5%), coffee at $2.1810 (-1.6%) and cotton at 84.23¢ (-1.3%).

 

Futures Referenced in Market Recap

Exchange Commodity Contract Month
CME Live Cattle December
CME Lean Hogs December
CBT Soybeans November
CBT Corn December
CBT Wheat December
ICE Coffee December
ICE Cocoa December
ICE Sugar January
ICE Cotton December
ICE Brent Crude December
ICE Dutch TTF Gas November
ICE USD Index December
NYMEX WTI Crude November
NYMEX ULSD (Heating Oil) November
NYMEX RBOB (Gasoline) November
NYMEX Natural Gas November
NYMEX Platinum January
NYMEX Palladium December
COMEX Gold December
COMEX Silver December
COMEX Copper December
LME Aluminum 3 Mo. Forward

 

Current Standings​

2022 World Cup Championship of Futures Trading®
RANK NAME NET RETURN LOCATION
1 Marco Vironda Gambin 168.8% Italy
2 John Bannan 168% Canada
3 Marek Chrastina 165.7% Slovakia
4 Fabio Viazzo 163.7% Italy
5 Stefan Seibert 117.1% Germany

January 1, 2022 – October 7, 2022


2022 World Cup Championship of Forex Trading®​
RANK NAME NET RETURN LOCATION
1 Eik Baumgarten 160.4% Germany
2 Patrick Nill 157.9% Germany
3 K. Takegawa 152.7% Japan
4 Thomas Helling 140.6% Germany
5 Giacomo Merletti 73% Italy

January 1, 2022 – October 7, 2022


2021-2022 Global Cup Trading Championship​
RANK NAME NET RETURN LOCATION DIVISION
1 Kevin Stufflebeam 392.9% USA Futures
2 Antonio Ferlito 133.2% Italy Futures
3 Patrick Nill 94.5% Germany Forex
4 Brent Carlile 66.3% Netherlands Futures
5 Philipp Kozalla 64.1% Germany Futures

June 1, 2021 – May 31, 2022 – Final Pending Audit

Trading futures and forex involves significant risk of loss and is not suitable for everyone. Past performance is not necessarily indicative of future results. World Cup Championship (WCC ) accounts do not necessarily represent all the trading accounts controlled by a given competitor. WCC competitors may control accounts that produce results substantially different than the results achieved in their WCC accounts. WCC entrants may trade more than one account in the competition. CME Group is the trademark of CME Group, Inc. The Globe logo is a trademark of Chicago Mercantile Exchange, Inc.

The post Weekly Market Recap – October 7, 2022 appeared first on World Cup Trading Championships.


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