Crude out of favour amid excessive supply, but oversold prices may soon recover slightly


Best analysis

On Thursday, oil prices bounced sharply on news Saudi Arabia had unexpectedly reduced its supply of oil in September. But the 328,000-barrel-per-day (bpd) decrease to 9.36m bpd was just a drop in the ocean. Indeed the price of Brent oil fell back earlier today before staging a late comeback. So, as the week draws to a close, Brent is hovering near the upper end of the range that it has been trading inside recently, while WTI is currently finding itself stuck around the lower half of its own consolidative range. The slight underperformance of WTI is unambiguously due to the sharp increases in US crude oil inventories that we have seen of late. According to the Energy Information Administration (EIA), oil stocks in the US climbed by an above-forecast 7.1 million barrels last week, which followed an even larger 8.9 million barrel increase the previous week. Unless crude inventories start decreasing sharply now and/or other large OPEC members begin cutting production, it is difficult to see where oil prices may find support from. As such, I am still slightly bearish on oil from a fundamental point of view, although now that prices have already fallen so much, the odds for a short-covering rally of some sort has meanwhile increased.


That said, a potential break below the recent lows may give rise to follow-up technical selling. On WTI (figure 1), traders should watch the $80 level very closely. So far, the bears have had three attempts to break down this psychological hurdle. The longer the bulls hold their ground here, the more likely it is that the sellers would reduce their positions, thereby increasing the probability of a sharp bounce towards at least the $84.40 resistance level. As can be seen from the weekly chart, there is also a Bullish Butterfly formation around $81, which further increases the chances of a bounce. Typically, this Fibonacci-based pattern leads to at least a 38.2% retracement of its CD leg. This translates to a potential bounce to around $90. But if the $80 level breaks down then WTI could drop all the way down to $77.50, which was the June 2012 low. After that the next support is at $75.00, the October 2010 low, followed by the next psychological level at $70. On Brent (figure 2), a decisive break above $87 could pave the way for a potential move towards the $90.00 or $91.50 resistance levels.

wti 1


wti 2


Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

AUD/USD: Extra gains in the pipeline above 0.6520

AUD/USD: Extra gains in the pipeline above 0.6520

AUD/USD partially reversed Tuesday’s strong pullback and regained the 0.6500 barrier and beyond in response to the sharp post-FOMC pullback in the Greenback on Wednesday.

AUD/USD News

EUR/USD meets support around 1.0650

EUR/USD meets support around 1.0650

EUR/USD managed to surpass the key 1.0700 barrier in response to the intense retracement in the US Dollar in the wake of the Fed’s interest rate decision and Chair Powell’s press conference.

EUR/USD News

Gold surpasses $2,300 as Dollar tumbles

Gold surpasses $2,300 as Dollar tumbles

The precious metal maintains its constructive stance and trespasses the $2,300 region on Wednesday after the Federal Reserve left its FFTR intact, matching market expectations.

Gold News

Bitcoin price reclaims $59K as Fed leaves rates unchanged

Bitcoin price reclaims $59K as Fed leaves rates unchanged

The market was at the edge of its seat on Wednesday to see whether the US Federal Reserve (Fed) would cut interest rates during the Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) meeting. 

Read more

The market welcomes the Fed's statement

The market welcomes the Fed's statement

The market has welcomed the Fed statement, and the S&P 500 is higher in its aftermath, the dollar is lower and Treasury yields are falling. There is still only one cut priced in by the Fed.

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures