Cannon Trading Podcast
Welcome to the Cannon Trading Podcast, where we bring you daily episodes with market updates and periodic deep dives into the world of trading commodity futures and options.
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Cannon Trading is a commodity futures brokerage established in 1988, and located in Los Angeles, CA.
DISCLAIMER:
Trading Commodities futures and options involves a substantial risk of loss.
The recommendations contained in this podcast are of opinion only and do not guarantee any profits.
This podcast is for educational purposes only.
Past performances are not necessarily indicative of future results.
Cannon Trading Podcast
Pre Market Briefing
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Imagine uh trying to trade oil when the platforms literally can't even agree on what the price is.
SPEAKER_01It is absolute chaos out there today.
SPEAKER_00It really is. Welcome to today's deep dive into the May 22nd, 2026 Pre-market futures briefing. This comes to us from Canon Trading Company and uh author Eli Levy. You can reach him via email at Eli at Canon Trading.com.
SPEAKER_01Right, lots to cover today.
SPEAKER_00Yeah, but before we jump into the numbers, I do need to read this required disclosure for you. Disclaimer. Trading futures, options on futures, and retail off-exchange foreign currency transactions and other financial instruments involves substantial risk of loss and are not suitable for all investors. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Carefully consider if trading is suitable for you in light of your circumstances, knowledge, and financial resources. You may lose all or more of your initial investment. Opinions, market data, and recommendations are subject to change at any time.
SPEAKER_01All right, so our mission today is really to help you navigate this jumpy pre-holiday market, because we've got, you know, massive geopolitical whipsaws happening.
SPEAKER_00Along with a monumental transition over at the Fed. Exactly. Because Kevin Walsh is officially succeeding Jerome Powell today as Fed chair. And I mean, talk about jumping into the driver's seat of a speeding race car.
SPEAKER_01Oh, yeah. It is a high-stakes handover.
SPEAKER_00Right. Because he's inheriting a market sitting at record highs. Like we're talking a Dow hitting 50,286. Which is huge. But at the same time, he's battling a really hot CPI, like 3.8% consumer inflation.
SPEAKER_01Yeah, and that hot consumer inflation is actually firming up the US dollar right now.
SPEAKER_00Which is usually a problem, right?
SPEAKER_01Well, yeah, a strong dollar usually acts as a major headwind for commodities. It just makes them more expensive for foreign buyers. Got it. But uh what's fascinating is the rotation we are seeing in the metals market today, because gold is essentially flat.
SPEAKER_00Just totally stalled up.
SPEAKER_01Right. But silver has surged over 2%.
SPEAKER_00Wait, really? Over two percent?
SPEAKER_01Yeah, signaling that traders are still, you know, willing to take on risk despite that strong dollar.
SPEAKER_00Oh wow. So they aren't just hiding in safe haven assets.
SPEAKER_01Exactly. Money is rotating within the metals complex, not fleeing it entirely.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell And that rotation makes even more sense when you look at the absolute chaos on the energy board. I mean, the US-Iran negotiations are just fluctuating daily.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Yeah, especially with Iran keeping near weapons grade uranium in country. Trevor Burrus, Jr.
SPEAKER_00Right. And it is causing crude oil to whipsaw so violently. Different data venues can't even agree on the exact WTI price right now.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Ross Powell The trading screens are completely fractured.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Which, wait, let me push back on that. How can traders even operate when basic price facts are just disputed across different desks?
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Well, uh it just really comes down to structural reality. The algos are just panic reading headlines in milliseconds, but beneath that stress, the physical fundamentals are incredibly stark.
SPEAKER_00Because supply is still super tight.
SPEAKER_01Aaron Powell Right. I mean, the U.S. just pulled a record 10 million barrels from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve.
SPEAKER_00Aaron Powell Wait, 10 million? If the pricing data is so broken, how do we know the physical supply data isn't equally distorted?
SPEAKER_01That is a fair question, but the SPR draw is a hard physical metric. It's reported by the Department of Energy, unlike the you know, millisecond spot price. So even with a historic emergency release, the physical market is starting for supply.
SPEAKER_00And that physical supply shortage cascades into everything else, doesn't it?
SPEAKER_01Oh, totally. It raises fertilizer costs for farmers, which quietly props up the floor prices for grains.
SPEAKER_00Even with the recent disappointment regarding China. Because Beijing just failed to confirm that highly anticipated $17 billion US agricultural purchase.
SPEAKER_01Yeah. That uncertainty is why grains slipped initially. But the underlying inflation from energy and fertilizer costs keeps those agricultural markets from just collapsing. Farmers literally can't afford to sell below the cost of their inputs.
SPEAKER_00So as you look at the board today, the core takeaway is that everything from metals to grains is basically tethered to energy.
SPEAKER_01Exactly.
SPEAKER_00And energy is just reacting to binary, unpredictable geopolitical headlines.
SPEAKER_01Which leaves us with a really critical question to chew on heading into the long weekend.
SPEAKER_00Oh, what's that?
SPEAKER_01If energy drives everything and we are already tapping record emergency reserves just to maintain the current balance, how violently will these markets instantly reprice if a surprise headline drops regarding the Strait of Hormuz during thin Memorial Day liquidity?
SPEAKER_00Man, that is a sobering thought to take into the holiday. We will leave you with that, but first one final reminder disclaimer. Trading futures, options on futures, and retail off-exchange foreign currency transactions and other financial instruments involve substantial risk of loss and are not suitable for all investors. Past performance is not indicative of future results. Carefully consider if trading is suitable for you in light of your circumstances, knowledge, and financial resources. You may lose all or more of your initial investment. Opinions, market data, and recommendations are subject to change at any time.