A chart: A summary of "pivot points + long/short position signals" for gold, crude oil, forex, and stock indices on November 26, 2025.
2025-11-26 11:50:42
The latest data released today (Wednesday, November 26, 2025) shows that, as of now, there are 4 commodities in this chart that are currently in an "overbought" state (bullish momentum exceeding 80%), and 3 commodities that are currently in an "oversold" state (bullish momentum less than 20%).
Among them, the highest proportion of long positions is in US WTI crude oil. The long position ratio for spot gold (XAU/USD) is 69%, for US WTI crude oil it is 93%, and for euro/dollar it is 45%. For updated "change signals" and a more detailed list of these instruments compared to yesterday, please see the specially created chart.
Among the signals of changes in positions, there were 3 instances of net long positions increasing, 7 instances of net long positions decreasing, 5 instances of net short positions increasing, and 4 instances of net short positions decreasing.
The following instruments have long positions of 80% or more: ★ US WTI Crude Oil (93% long). ★ FTSE China A50 (83% long). ★ S&P 500 (80% long). ★ EUR/JPY (86% short). ★ EUR/AUD (88% short). ★ GBP/JPY (81% short). ★ AUD/USD (82% long). ★ USD/CNH (83% long).

[Chart: Pivot Points and Long/Short Position Signals for Gold, Crude Oil, Forex, and Stock Indices. Source: FX678 Special Chart. (Click image to enlarge)]
Net short positions decreased in the following pairs: EUR/GBP, GBP/USD, AUD/JPY, and CAD/JPY.
The following pairs saw an increase in net long positions: spot gold (XAU/USD), Australian dollar against US dollar (AUD/USD), and US dollar against offshore yuan (USD/CNH).
The following currencies saw a decrease in net long positions: Spot Silver XAG/USD, FTSE China A50, Hang Seng Index HK50, S&P 500, Nikkei 225, USD/CHF, and NZD/USD.
FX678 reminds you that the position signal is derived from the comparison of the latest "net long position %" and the yesterday's "net long position %". An increase in net long position indicates "net long position expansion", and a change from negative to positive net long position indicates "position reversal to net long position", and so on.
★In the table, "Latest Net Long Position %" refers to the current "long position percentage minus short position percentage," and "Yesterday's Net Long Position %" indicates the last updated (usually the previous trading day's) net long position data for comparison. A negative net long position means the long position percentage < the short position percentage. A positive net long position means the long position percentage > the short position percentage. By comparing the latest net long position % with yesterday's updated net long position % (previous trading day's net long position %), the interpreted "position signals" cover 13 types, including "net long position expansion, net long position decrease, net short position unchanged, and net short position turning into a balance between long and short positions." Several of these signals are displayed based on the actual data comparison results; see the charts in this article for details. These position signals are for reference only and should not be used as trading advice. The current price movement may contradict the position indication direction; these contradictions may contain potential opportunities. Furthermore, subsequent price movements are influenced by various complex factors, and traders must make their own decisions.
The trading instruments covered in this chart include: spot gold, spot silver, US crude oil, FTSE China A50, Hong Kong Hang Seng Index, S&P 500 Index, Nasdaq 100, Dow Jones Index, German DAX 40, EUR/USD, EUR/GBP, EUR/JPY, EUR/AUD, GBP/USD, GBP/JPY, USD/JPY, USD/CAD, USD/CHF, AUD/USD, AUD/JPY, CAD/JPY, and NZD/USD.
- Risk Warning and Disclaimer
- The market involves risk, and trading may not be suitable for all investors. This article is for reference only and does not constitute personal investment advice, nor does it take into account certain users’ specific investment objectives, financial situation, or other needs. Any investment decisions made based on this information are at your own risk.