This is the 15 minute chart for soybeans today. Needless to say, it would be nearly impossible to trade profitably. Under circumstances like today, only short-term trades can be taken. This is why I trade only using tick charts. Days like we have seen in the past few weeks, in which we repeatedly reach lock limits, put me at somewhat of a disadvantage, so I prefer trading like this.
However, this chart is still valuable to me. Note the very potent resistance to prices moving higher through the upper daily price limit. How many times have prices approached this limit today and been repelled? About seven times!
Also, the Bollinger Bands are relatively flat, so they suggest to me that short-term, swing trading will be the most profitable, and that longer-term trading, even intra-day, will be an exercise in futility. One would have to use extremely wide stops, and accept considerable risk, to trade this market on longer-term charts today.
The underlying fundamentals of soybeans remain strong, so prices should remain well supported, and perhaps continue to move higher, but a balance between buying and selling activity appears to have been restored.
Much of this we owe to the renewed weakness of the US Dollar this week. The chart for the US Dollar Index futures below shows the short-lived rally of the Dollar and the new sell-off over the past few days (left chart - daily, middle - 2 hr, right - 30 minute). The Dollar is once again very close to its all-time lows at 71.400. The price at the time of this posting is 71.910. If the US Dollar Index does not break through the previous low, then a consolidation pattern and range trading may be in the offing for the near-term future. It appears that the Fed's attempts to underpin and support the Dollar have failed.
However, this chart is still valuable to me. Note the very potent resistance to prices moving higher through the upper daily price limit. How many times have prices approached this limit today and been repelled? About seven times!
Also, the Bollinger Bands are relatively flat, so they suggest to me that short-term, swing trading will be the most profitable, and that longer-term trading, even intra-day, will be an exercise in futility. One would have to use extremely wide stops, and accept considerable risk, to trade this market on longer-term charts today.
The underlying fundamentals of soybeans remain strong, so prices should remain well supported, and perhaps continue to move higher, but a balance between buying and selling activity appears to have been restored.
Much of this we owe to the renewed weakness of the US Dollar this week. The chart for the US Dollar Index futures below shows the short-lived rally of the Dollar and the new sell-off over the past few days (left chart - daily, middle - 2 hr, right - 30 minute). The Dollar is once again very close to its all-time lows at 71.400. The price at the time of this posting is 71.910. If the US Dollar Index does not break through the previous low, then a consolidation pattern and range trading may be in the offing for the near-term future. It appears that the Fed's attempts to underpin and support the Dollar have failed.