Raw material prices are rising. When the global economy recovers, how long can the boom last?Doug King created his hedge fund at the dawn of the commodity supercycle in 2004. It was just in time: due to insatiable demand from China, prices for everything from oil to copper rose to record highs. Investors flooded the commodity sector. At the peak of sales, King's Merchant Commodity Fund managed approximately $2 billion.But the boom suddenly stopped after the global financial crisis of 2008 and the beginning of the shale revolution in the United States. Prices have fallen, big institutional money has come out, and many specialized hedge funds have closed.Fast forward more than ten years. For King, one of the best periods of his career has begun: a massive boom in raw materials has lifted his hedge fund by almost 50% this year, as commodities, from steel to soybeans, have reached multi-year highs. And now everyone, from pension funds to individuals who sell commodities, makes money from them. And the only question is whether this is a temporary phenomenon after the pandemic or a signal for longer-term changes in the structure of the world economy."We are experiencing a structural inflation shock," King said. "There is a lot of pent-up demand, and everyone wants everything now, right now."For the first time since the pre-crisis years until 2008, the commodity boom means that central banks are concerned about inflation. The rally will also have a political impact.With an oil price of about $70 per barrel, Saudi Arabia and Russia are once again leading the global energy market – a remarkable return after negative prices just over a year ago. The boom is also an undesirable phenomenon for politicians who are resisting the climate crisis: rising commodity prices will make the transition more expensive.China, which depends on imported raw materials to supply millions of factories and construction sites, is so nervous that the government has tried to lower prices by threatening speculators. To some extent, this worked, as copper lost its positions achieved this year. But on average, prices remain high: iron ore is still close to a record, steel prices in the US have tripled this year, coal has risen to a 13-year high, and natural gas prices are rising.Even after the recent pullback, the Bloomberg Commodities Spot Index, which takes into account the prices of 22 commodities, rose by 78% compared to the minimum of March 2020.And crude oil, the most important commodity in the global economy, showed significant growth this year. This prompted traders and Wall Street banks to talk again about the possibility that prices will exceed $100 per barrel for the first time since 2014.As prices rose, so did Wall Street's interest. The annual Robin Hood Investor Conference, which brings together hedge fund luminaries every year, from Paul Tudor Jones to Stanley F. Druckenmiller and Ray Dalio, in early June, included a discussion on commodities. For the first time in the last five years, the conference was given time to discuss commodities.Jeff Curry, a veteran commodity researcher at Goldman Sachs Group Inc., who advocates a long-term bull market for commodities despite the recent sell-off in metals and grains, says there is room for significant investment in the market."Commodities are back in fashion," Curry said. Despite the hype due to sky-high prices, the sector was not able to attract large cash flows, as it was during the boom of 2004-2011.Those investors and traders who have already invested in commodities, betting on recovery after the pandemic, were able to make a profit.Take, for example, Cargill Inc. The world's largest agricultural commodities trader made more money in just the first nine months of the fiscal year than in any full year in its history, as net profit exceeded $4 billion.Or Trafigura Group. It is the second-largest independent oil trader in the world, whose net profit of more than $2 billion in the six months to the end of March was almost the same as for the previous best full year."Our core sales units are operating at full capacity," said Jeremy Weir, chief executive of Trafigura.However, for consumers, the commodity boom means memories of high inflation. For now, companies are mostly taking the brunt of the impact, pushing manufacturing inflation in some countries, including China, to its highest level in more than a decade. But sooner or later, consumers will also pay for it.Companies, from Unilever Plc to Procter & Gamble Co., announced plans to raise prices in the near future."We are seeing levels of commodity inflation that we haven't seen in a very long time," Graham Pitketley, Unilever's chief financial officer, told investors after the release of first – quarter results. "The commodity inflation that we are seeing affects all companies."The speed and scope of this rally, which affected dozens of raw materials from vegetable oil to coal, prompted many to talk about a new commodity supercycle, similar to the one that began almost two decades ago, when China's rapid industrialization changed the structure of the world economy. economy.Economists usually define a supercycle as a period of abnormally high demand that oil companies, mining companies and farmers are struggling to meet, causing a rally that lasts longer than the usual business cycle. Before China, the century of modern history witnessed three different commodity supercycles, each of which was caused by a transformational socio-economic event. The industrialization of the United States gave rise to the first in the early 1900s, global rearmament gave rise to the second in the 1930s, and the recovery of Europe and Japan after World War II gave rise to the third in the 1950s and 1960s.The appearance of the fifth supercycle would be a big event. The price rally confirms the talk of a new boom: the Bloomberg Commodity Spot Index, consisting of 23 commodities, is almost 500 points, which corresponds to the peaks of 2007-08 and 2010-11. And yet, what is more likely is that the world is still experiencing the impact of a China-led supercycle, which is now loaded with contradictory economic shifts caused by the coronavirus pandemic.Change in the value of commodities in one year The speed and scope of this rally, which affected dozens of raw materials, from vegetable oil to coal, prompted many to talk about a new commodity supercycle, similar to the one that began almost two decades ago, when China's rapid industrialization changed the structure of the world economy.Economists usually define a supercycle as a period of abnormally high demand that oil companies, mining companies and farmers are struggling to meet, causing a rally that lasts longer than the usual business cycle. Before China, the century of modern history witnessed three different commodity supercycles, each of which was caused by a transformational socio-economic event.The industrialization of the United States gave rise to the first supercycle in the early 1900s, global rearmament gave rise to another in the 1930s, and the recovery of Europe and Japan after World War II gave rise to a third in the 1950s and 1960s.The appearance of the fifth supercycle would be a big event. The price rally confirms the talk of a new boom: the Bloomberg Commodity Spot Index, consisting of 23 commodities, is almost 500 points, which corresponds to the peaks of 2007-08 and 2010-11. But it is more likely that the world is still under the influence of a super cycle led by China, which is now being spurred by the contradictory economic changes caused by the coronavirus pandemic.Initially, Covid was bad news for commodity demand. The world was locked up, travel was reduced, factories were closed. The price of everything from oil to copper followed consumption, falling sharply between March and May last year. But after the first few months, the world began to get back on its feet, and consumption patterns changed towards commodities.To understand what happened, it is necessary to understand the typical relationship between the demand for goods and well-being. As a rule, poor countries consume little raw materials, because most of the costs go to meet basic needs, such as food and housing.The optimal place for commodities is countries with a per capita income of $4,000 to $18,000 – the average income range that China entered in the early 2000s. This disproportionately affects the demand for commodities, since it depends on the level of urbanization and industrialization of countries. With this range of per capita income, families have the money to buy cars, household appliances and other goods that require a lot of raw materials.Industrially developing countries are also building railways, highways, hospitals and other public infrastructure.The demand for goods above $20,000 per capita begins to decline as the wealthier segments of the population spend the increase in wealth on services such as better education, health care and recreation.The coronavirus pandemic has changed this dynamic. Since many families are isolated, spending is shifting from services to goods, even in the wealthiest countries, such as the United States. In many ways, American and European consumers have been behaving in the same way as the population of developing countries for several months, spending money on buying various goods, from new bicycles to televisions.The US economy is the best example of this trend. Overall consumer spending remains below the trends of 2018-19, but this hides a huge discrepancy between spending on goods and services. According to the Peterson Institute for International Economics, household spending on goods is currently 11% higher than the level observed before the pandemic. At the same time, spending on services such as recreation, restaurants or entertainment remains 7% lower than before the appearance of the coronavirus."Ultra-accommodative monetary policy, unprecedented fiscal stimulus, pent-up demand, strong household balance sheets and record savings all together paint a picture of a steady and confident growth trajectory," said Saad Rahim, chief economist at Trafigura. Fiscal stimulus has other parallels with emerging markets, as Western governments target infrastructure spending by promising to rebuild highways, railways and bridges.Governments are also striving to build a greener future in order to abandon fossil fuels. Although this is bad news for the coal and oil markets, it means an increase in demand for raw materials such as copper, aluminum and battery metals such as cobalt and lithium, which are key to the transition to green energy."Commodity prices will remain high for a long time to come," said Ivan Glasenberg, the outgoing CEO of commodities giant Glencore Plc. According to him, for the first time, two superpowers of the world, the United States and China, simultaneously promoted major infrastructure projects to save their economies from the impact of the coronavirus pandemic.The offer is trying to catch up. Some of the bottlenecks are caused by deliberate actions by producing countries, such as the OPEC+ alliance, which cut oil production last year. And another shortage is due to the complexity of the work of mines, smelters and farms at the height of the pandemic.The decisive factor for the duration of growth is the structural restriction of supply, which means that high prices may not work as a signal to increase production and, ultimately, return the market to equilibrium.The forces that slow down the reaction of the proposal are twofold. First, there are more and more demands from the fighters against climate change that the same production of fossil fuels, such as coal, oil and gas, be reduced. Secondly, the shareholders of the companies demand that the management pays them higher dividends, which, in turn, leaves less money for expanding mines or drilling new wells.The impact of these forces is already evident in some areas of the commodity market, where companies stopped investing in new supplies several years ago. Take, for example, thermal coal. Mining companies have been cutting costs since at least 2015. As demand increased, coal prices jumped to a level not seen in the last 10 years. The same thing happened with iron ore, whose prices soared to a record high at the beginning of this year. The next one is likely to be oil, where companies are significantly cutting costs.For commodity bulls like Doug King, this is a sign of doubling. "This is the beginning of a proper boom cycle, and this is not a temporary surge," he ...
Corn Trading forecasts and signals
Total signals – 15
Active signals for Corn
Total signals – 0
Corn rate traders
Total number of traders – 3
Daily
Symbols: 69
Trend
accuracy 93%
accuracy 93%
- Aeroflot (MOEX) 100%
- Gazprom 100%
- Sberbank (MOEX) 100%
- AUD/USD 60%
- EUR/USD 100%
- GBP/USD 50%
- USD/CAD 100%
- USD/JPY 93%
- CAD/CHF 100%
- EUR/AUD 100%
- EUR/GBP 95%
- CAD/JPY 75%
- EUR/CHF 100%
- GBP/AUD 100%
- GBP/NZD 100%
- AUD/NZD 100%
- GBP/CHF 0%
- AUD/CHF 56%
- EUR/JPY 78%
- CHF/JPY 100%
- EUR/CAD 100%
- GBP/JPY 95%
- AUD/JPY 100%
- NZD/USD 75%
- GBP/CAD 100%
- NZD/CAD 100%
- AUD/CAD 100%
- Cardano/USD 100%
- Ethereum/USD 71%
- Bitcoin/USD 96%
- XRP/USD 89%
- US Dollar Index 90%
- DAX 75%
- Nikkei 225 80%
- Dow Jones 91%
- NASDAQ 100 74%
- S&P 500 85%
- RUSSELL 2000 90%
- CAC 40 89%
- WTI Crude Oil 92%
- Natural Gas 60%
- Palladium 100%
- Gold 67%
- Alphabet 100%
- Alibaba 100%
- Visa 100%
- Activision Blizzard 100%
- Adobe Systems 67%
- Airbus SE 100%
- Volkswagen AG 100%
- Apple 100%
- American Express 100%
- Johnson&Johnson 100%
- Microsoft 100%
- Renault SA 0%
- Coca-Cola 100%
- nVidia 100%
- Caterpillar 100%
- Bank of America 83%
- Intel 33%
- Adidas 100%
- Exxon Mobil 67%
- Amazon 80%
- Tesla Motors 75%
- Boeing 50%
- Corn 100%
- Wheat 89%
- Soybean 90%
- ASX 200 100%
Price
accuracy 83%
accuracy 83%
- Aeroflot (MOEX) 15%
- Gazprom 57%
- Sberbank (MOEX) 88%
- AUD/USD 12%
- EUR/USD 75%
- GBP/USD 26%
- USD/CAD 61%
- USD/JPY 58%
- CAD/CHF 67%
- EUR/AUD 63%
- EUR/GBP 81%
- CAD/JPY 54%
- EUR/CHF 79%
- GBP/AUD 91%
- GBP/NZD 100%
- AUD/NZD 99%
- GBP/CHF 0%
- AUD/CHF 47%
- EUR/JPY 59%
- CHF/JPY 66%
- EUR/CAD 72%
- GBP/JPY 85%
- AUD/JPY 57%
- NZD/USD 51%
- GBP/CAD 54%
- NZD/CAD 62%
- AUD/CAD 100%
- Cardano/USD 67%
- Ethereum/USD 50%
- Bitcoin/USD 86%
- XRP/USD 79%
- US Dollar Index 76%
- DAX 41%
- Nikkei 225 62%
- Dow Jones 73%
- NASDAQ 100 62%
- S&P 500 80%
- RUSSELL 2000 76%
- CAC 40 47%
- WTI Crude Oil 73%
- Natural Gas 50%
- Palladium 66%
- Gold 50%
- Alphabet 100%
- Alibaba 100%
- Visa 35%
- Activision Blizzard 89%
- Adobe Systems 25%
- Airbus SE 47%
- Volkswagen AG 100%
- Apple 66%
- American Express 30%
- Johnson&Johnson 82%
- Microsoft 33%
- Renault SA 0%
- Coca-Cola 57%
- nVidia 33%
- Caterpillar 77%
- Bank of America 60%
- Intel 22%
- Adidas 7%
- Exxon Mobil 45%
- Amazon 44%
- Tesla Motors 54%
- Boeing 50%
- Corn 77%
- Wheat 87%
- Soybean 68%
- ASX 200 86%
Profitableness,
pips/day 12263
pips/day 12263
- Aeroflot (MOEX) 2
- Gazprom 2
- Sberbank (MOEX) 15
- AUD/USD -6
- EUR/USD 15
- GBP/USD -15
- USD/CAD 5
- USD/JPY 23
- CAD/CHF 8
- EUR/AUD 9
- EUR/GBP 13
- CAD/JPY -21
- EUR/CHF 4
- GBP/AUD 41
- GBP/NZD 36
- AUD/NZD 7
- GBP/CHF -3
- AUD/CHF 2
- EUR/JPY 4
- CHF/JPY 32
- EUR/CAD 20
- GBP/JPY 29
- AUD/JPY 38
- NZD/USD 27
- GBP/CAD 34
- NZD/CAD 23
- AUD/CAD 35
- Cardano/USD 202
- Ethereum/USD -895
- Bitcoin/USD 17043
- XRP/USD 27
- US Dollar Index 21
- DAX 5
- Nikkei 225 30
- Dow Jones 62
- NASDAQ 100 7
- S&P 500 13
- RUSSELL 2000 53
- CAC 40 83
- WTI Crude Oil 13349
- Natural Gas 22
- Palladium 190
- Gold 118
- Alphabet 38
- Alibaba 13
- Visa 3
- Activision Blizzard 39
- Adobe Systems -9
- Airbus SE 31
- Volkswagen AG 499
- Apple 6
- American Express 31
- Johnson&Johnson 27
- Microsoft 44
- Renault SA 0
- Coca-Cola 12
- nVidia 1
- Caterpillar 256
- Bank of America 46
- Intel -44
- Adidas 22
- Exxon Mobil -5
- Amazon 0
- Tesla Motors 10
- Boeing -10
- Corn 54
- Wheat -6
- Soybean 266
- ASX 200 682
Do_Alex
Symbols: 57
Trend
accuracy 77%
accuracy 77%
- Yandex 100%
- AUD/USD 80%
- EUR/USD 77%
- GBP/USD 80%
- USD/CAD 78%
- USD/CHF 79%
- USD/JPY 77%
- USD/RUB 71%
- USD/ZAR 100%
- CAD/CHF 75%
- EUR/AUD 72%
- EUR/NZD 80%
- EUR/GBP 66%
- CAD/JPY 83%
- EUR/CHF 69%
- GBP/AUD 71%
- GBP/NZD 73%
- AUD/NZD 75%
- GBP/CHF 71%
- NZD/CHF 81%
- AUD/CHF 84%
- EUR/JPY 76%
- CHF/JPY 78%
- EUR/CAD 75%
- GBP/JPY 79%
- NZD/JPY 70%
- AUD/JPY 73%
- NZD/USD 76%
- GBP/CAD 82%
- NZD/CAD 80%
- AUD/CAD 80%
- Zcash/USD 100%
- BitcoinCash/USD 100%
- Litecoin/USD 100%
- Ethereum/Bitcoin 100%
- Ethereum/USD 100%
- Bitcoin/USD 88%
- XRP/USD 84%
- RTS 100%
- US Dollar Index 82%
- Nikkei 225 100%
- Dow Jones 94%
- NASDAQ 100 85%
- S&P 500 79%
- Brent Crude Oil 47%
- WTI Crude Oil 75%
- Natural Gas 83%
- Silver 74%
- Gold 76%
- Copper 50%
- Apple 78%
- Pfizer 0%
- Meta Platforms 80%
- Amazon 0%
- Tesla Motors 79%
- Boeing 100%
- Corn 100%
Price
accuracy 77%
accuracy 77%
- Yandex 81%
- AUD/USD 80%
- EUR/USD 77%
- GBP/USD 80%
- USD/CAD 78%
- USD/CHF 79%
- USD/JPY 77%
- USD/RUB 44%
- USD/ZAR 8%
- CAD/CHF 75%
- EUR/AUD 73%
- EUR/NZD 80%
- EUR/GBP 66%
- CAD/JPY 83%
- EUR/CHF 68%
- GBP/AUD 72%
- GBP/NZD 73%
- AUD/NZD 75%
- GBP/CHF 70%
- NZD/CHF 80%
- AUD/CHF 84%
- EUR/JPY 76%
- CHF/JPY 78%
- EUR/CAD 75%
- GBP/JPY 79%
- NZD/JPY 70%
- AUD/JPY 73%
- NZD/USD 76%
- GBP/CAD 81%
- NZD/CAD 80%
- AUD/CAD 80%
- Zcash/USD 100%
- BitcoinCash/USD 100%
- Litecoin/USD 100%
- Ethereum/Bitcoin 100%
- Ethereum/USD 98%
- Bitcoin/USD 88%
- XRP/USD 84%
- RTS 88%
- US Dollar Index 81%
- Nikkei 225 11%
- Dow Jones 94%
- NASDAQ 100 84%
- S&P 500 78%
- Brent Crude Oil 47%
- WTI Crude Oil 74%
- Natural Gas 81%
- Silver 74%
- Gold 76%
- Copper 50%
- Apple 74%
- Pfizer 0%
- Meta Platforms 68%
- Amazon 0%
- Tesla Motors 77%
- Boeing 11%
- Corn 100%
Profitableness,
pips/day 100
pips/day 100
- Yandex 544
- AUD/USD 1
- EUR/USD 1
- GBP/USD 3
- USD/CAD 1
- USD/CHF 1
- USD/JPY 0
- USD/RUB 9
- USD/ZAR 13
- CAD/CHF -1
- EUR/AUD -6
- EUR/NZD 1
- EUR/GBP -4
- CAD/JPY 4
- EUR/CHF -3
- GBP/AUD -6
- GBP/NZD -3
- AUD/NZD -2
- GBP/CHF -3
- NZD/CHF 2
- AUD/CHF 1
- EUR/JPY 0
- CHF/JPY 0
- EUR/CAD -4
- GBP/JPY 3
- NZD/JPY -5
- AUD/JPY -2
- NZD/USD -1
- GBP/CAD 5
- NZD/CAD 2
- AUD/CAD 0
- Zcash/USD 75
- BitcoinCash/USD 180
- Litecoin/USD 150
- Ethereum/Bitcoin 17
- Ethereum/USD 140
- Bitcoin/USD 71
- XRP/USD 40
- RTS 89
- US Dollar Index 3
- Nikkei 225 7
- Dow Jones 75
- NASDAQ 100 27
- S&P 500 2
- Brent Crude Oil -4
- WTI Crude Oil 4
- Natural Gas 17
- Silver -1
- Gold 1
- Copper 11
- Apple 0
- Pfizer -8
- Meta Platforms -3
- Amazon -2
- Tesla Motors 104
- Boeing 3
- Corn 200
TradeShot
Symbols: 104
Trend
accuracy 75%
accuracy 75%
- AUD/USD 68%
- EUR/USD 74%
- GBP/USD 71%
- USD/CAD 73%
- USD/CHF 77%
- USD/JPY 66%
- USD/RUB 81%
- USD/ZAR 25%
- USD/TRY 60%
- CAD/CHF 72%
- EUR/AUD 74%
- EUR/NZD 56%
- EUR/GBP 68%
- CAD/JPY 81%
- USD/SGD 58%
- USD/NOK 100%
- EUR/CHF 53%
- GBP/AUD 70%
- GBP/NZD 67%
- USD/SEK 71%
- AUD/NZD 67%
- GBP/CHF 86%
- EUR/NOK 83%
- NZD/CHF 74%
- AUD/CHF 55%
- EUR/JPY 74%
- CHF/JPY 64%
- EUR/CAD 75%
- GBP/JPY 70%
- NZD/JPY 76%
- AUD/JPY 71%
- NZD/USD 61%
- GBP/CAD 75%
- NZD/CAD 65%
- AUD/CAD 76%
- Dash/USD 43%
- Stellar/USD 88%
- EthereumClassic/USD 67%
- Zcash/USD 75%
- Cardano/USD 52%
- EOS/USD 75%
- BitcoinCash/USD 75%
- Litecoin/USD 85%
- Tron/USD 78%
- NEO/USD 75%
- Ethereum/Bitcoin 83%
- Ethereum/USD 82%
- Monero/USD 63%
- Bitcoin/USD 74%
- XRP/USD 81%
- US Dollar Index 73%
- DAX 76%
- Nikkei 225 100%
- Dow Jones 83%
- NASDAQ 100 76%
- S&P 500 81%
- RUSSELL 2000 71%
- China A50 75%
- FTSE 100 84%
- Hang Seng 71%
- WTI Crude Oil 76%
- Natural Gas 74%
- Palladium 88%
- Silver 72%
- Gold 75%
- Copper 67%
- Platinum 67%
- Alphabet 64%
- Alibaba 91%
- Visa 50%
- MasterCard 100%
- Nike 67%
- Uber Technologies 100%
- Apple 80%
- Microsoft 95%
- McDonald's 100%
- Netflix 71%
- Procter & Gamble 67%
- Coca-Cola 100%
- nVidia 78%
- Pfizer 100%
- Meta Platforms 79%
- Twitter 100%
- Bank of America 67%
- Intel 0%
- Amazon 67%
- Oracle 100%
- Tesla Motors 80%
- Spotify 100%
- Boeing 50%
- Corn 100%
- Wheat 50%
- Soybean 100%
- Dogecoin 76%
- Binance Coin 71%
- Polkadot 82%
- Uniswap 100%
- Chainlink 70%
- Axie Infinity 0%
- USD/CNY 88%
- USD/INR 67%
- Solana 78%
- Aave 80%
- Avalanche 67%
Price
accuracy 75%
accuracy 75%
- AUD/USD 68%
- EUR/USD 73%
- GBP/USD 71%
- USD/CAD 73%
- USD/CHF 77%
- USD/JPY 66%
- USD/RUB 81%
- USD/ZAR 25%
- USD/TRY 60%
- CAD/CHF 69%
- EUR/AUD 74%
- EUR/NZD 56%
- EUR/GBP 68%
- CAD/JPY 81%
- USD/SGD 58%
- USD/NOK 100%
- EUR/CHF 53%
- GBP/AUD 70%
- GBP/NZD 67%
- USD/SEK 71%
- AUD/NZD 65%
- GBP/CHF 86%
- EUR/NOK 83%
- NZD/CHF 71%
- AUD/CHF 55%
- EUR/JPY 74%
- CHF/JPY 64%
- EUR/CAD 75%
- GBP/JPY 70%
- NZD/JPY 76%
- AUD/JPY 71%
- NZD/USD 61%
- GBP/CAD 75%
- NZD/CAD 65%
- AUD/CAD 76%
- Dash/USD 43%
- Stellar/USD 77%
- EthereumClassic/USD 67%
- Zcash/USD 75%
- Cardano/USD 52%
- EOS/USD 75%
- BitcoinCash/USD 75%
- Litecoin/USD 85%
- Tron/USD 78%
- NEO/USD 75%
- Ethereum/Bitcoin 54%
- Ethereum/USD 81%
- Monero/USD 63%
- Bitcoin/USD 74%
- XRP/USD 81%
- US Dollar Index 73%
- DAX 74%
- Nikkei 225 100%
- Dow Jones 83%
- NASDAQ 100 75%
- S&P 500 80%
- RUSSELL 2000 71%
- China A50 75%
- FTSE 100 84%
- Hang Seng 71%
- WTI Crude Oil 76%
- Natural Gas 72%
- Palladium 88%
- Silver 74%
- Gold 74%
- Copper 67%
- Platinum 67%
- Alphabet 64%
- Alibaba 91%
- Visa 50%
- MasterCard 100%
- Nike 67%
- Uber Technologies 100%
- Apple 76%
- Microsoft 94%
- McDonald's 100%
- Netflix 71%
- Procter & Gamble 62%
- Coca-Cola 100%
- nVidia 76%
- Pfizer 100%
- Meta Platforms 79%
- Twitter 100%
- Bank of America 67%
- Intel 0%
- Amazon 67%
- Oracle 100%
- Tesla Motors 77%
- Spotify 100%
- Boeing 3%
- Corn 100%
- Wheat 50%
- Soybean 100%
- Dogecoin 76%
- Binance Coin 71%
- Polkadot 82%
- Uniswap 100%
- Chainlink 70%
- Axie Infinity 0%
- USD/CNY 88%
- USD/INR 67%
- Solana 78%
- Aave 80%
- Avalanche 67%
Profitableness,
pips/day 31
pips/day 31
- AUD/USD -6
- EUR/USD 0
- GBP/USD -2
- USD/CAD 3
- USD/CHF 2
- USD/JPY 0
- USD/RUB 7
- USD/ZAR -116
- USD/TRY -85
- CAD/CHF -1
- EUR/AUD 0
- EUR/NZD -15
- EUR/GBP -3
- CAD/JPY 3
- USD/SGD -2
- USD/NOK 800
- EUR/CHF -10
- GBP/AUD -27
- GBP/NZD -9
- USD/SEK -217
- AUD/NZD -3
- GBP/CHF 19
- EUR/NOK 75
- NZD/CHF 0
- AUD/CHF -7
- EUR/JPY 0
- CHF/JPY -7
- EUR/CAD 2
- GBP/JPY -6
- NZD/JPY 0
- AUD/JPY -5
- NZD/USD -6
- GBP/CAD 1
- NZD/CAD -2
- AUD/CAD 1
- Dash/USD -10
- Stellar/USD 9
- EthereumClassic/USD -450
- Zcash/USD -115
- Cardano/USD -104
- EOS/USD 50
- BitcoinCash/USD -3
- Litecoin/USD 6
- Tron/USD 2
- NEO/USD 0
- Ethereum/Bitcoin 0
- Ethereum/USD 19
- Monero/USD 0
- Bitcoin/USD 48
- XRP/USD -7
- US Dollar Index 1
- DAX 0
- Nikkei 225 167
- Dow Jones 37
- NASDAQ 100 2
- S&P 500 5
- RUSSELL 2000 -31
- China A50 147
- FTSE 100 8
- Hang Seng -30
- WTI Crude Oil 9
- Natural Gas -11
- Palladium 21
- Silver 0
- Gold 1
- Copper -33
- Platinum -34
- Alphabet -68
- Alibaba 8
- Visa -1
- MasterCard 240
- Nike 24
- Uber Technologies 48
- Apple 3
- Microsoft 16
- McDonald's 13
- Netflix 4
- Procter & Gamble -6
- Coca-Cola 25
- nVidia -1
- Pfizer 60
- Meta Platforms -10
- Twitter 45
- Bank of America 3
- Intel -80
- Amazon -4
- Oracle 67
- Tesla Motors -5
- Spotify 250
- Boeing -5
- Corn 267
- Wheat 0
- Soybean 667
- Dogecoin -4
- Binance Coin -128
- Polkadot -1
- Uniswap 163
- Chainlink -75
- Axie Infinity -250
- USD/CNY 17
- USD/INR -23
- Solana -27
- Aave 125
- Avalanche -41
Completed signals of Corn
Total signals – 15
Showing 1-15 of 15 items.
| Trader | Date and time created | Forecast closure date | Closing quote | S/L | Comments | Trend accuracy in % | Price accuracy in % | Profitability, pips |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Daily | 24.10.2024 | 06.11.2024 | 426.38 | 0.00 | 100 | 76.9 | 538 | |
| Cox | 08.04.2024 | 23.04.2024 | 443.00 | 430.00 | 100 | 25.0 | 100 | |
| Cox | 08.04.2024 | 22.04.2024 | 440.00 | 430.00 | 0 | 0.0 | 0 | |
| Cox | 08.04.2024 | 09.04.2024 | 430.00 | 430.00 | 0 | 0.0 | -600 | |
| TradeShot | 07.03.2024 | 11.03.2024 | 441.00 | 427.00 | 100 | 100.0 | 200 | |
| TradeShot | 07.03.2024 | 08.03.2024 | 439.00 | 427.00 | 100 | 100.0 | 200 | |
| TradeShot | 07.03.2024 | 07.03.2024 | 437.00 | 427.00 | 100 | 100.0 | 200 | |
| TradeShot | 07.03.2024 | 07.03.2024 | 435.00 | 427.00 | 100 | 100.0 | 200 | |
| ToneFX | 17.03.2023 | 23.03.2023 | 642.00 | 632.00 | 100 | 100.0 | 100 | |
| Dreamer | 23.03.2023 | 23.03.2023 | 641.00 | 633.00 | 100 | 100.0 | 100 | |
| Dreamer | 23.03.2023 | 23.03.2023 | 640.00 | 632.00 | 100 | 100.0 | 100 | |
| Dreamer | 23.03.2023 | 23.03.2023 | 639.00 | 631.00 | 100 | 100.0 | 100 | |
| Dreamer | 23.03.2023 | 23.03.2023 | 638.00 | 630.00 | 100 | 100.0 | 100 | |
| ToneFX | 17.03.2023 | 20.03.2023 | 629.00 | 629.00 | 0 | 0.0 | -900 | |
| Do_Alex | 18.10.2022 | 18.10.2022 | 675.00 | 685.00 | 100 | 100.0 | 200 |
Not activated price forecasts Corn
Total signals – 6