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WTI struggles around mid-$92.00s on US-Iran deal, recession concerns

  • WTI remains pressured amid mixed clues as the NFP week begins.
  • Doubts about the US-Iran oil deal join recession woes to trouble traders.
  • US jobs report, OPEC+ verdict will be crucial for near-term directions.

WTI crude oil struggles to extend the previous weekly gains, taking rounds to $92.50 during Monday’s Asian session, as traders witness mixed catalysts. Among them, concerns surrounding the US-Iran oil deal and recession gained major attention.

“The US and Iran remain at loggerheads over key details of an emerging deal to revive a landmark nuclear agreement and may need several weeks to resolve their differences, according to officials familiar with the talks,” reported Bloomberg on Saturday. The news also mentioned that even if Washington and Tehran agree to revive the accord, implementing it will be a challenge, according to the European official, implying that a full Iranian return to oil markets would take months. 

Alternatively, multiple central bankers sounded hawkish, led by Fed Chair Jerome Powell, during the latest annual Jackson Hole Symposium event, paying little heed to the impending recession woes. With this, the economic slowdown fears join rate hikes and can underpin the US dollar, which in turn could exert downside pressure on the black gold.

On the same line could be the recent increase in the US-China tension, which in turn could raise worries over the oil demand. China's military said on Sunday, per Reuters, that it was monitoring US Navy vessels sailing through the Taiwan Strait, maintaining a high alert and ready to defeat any provocations.

Elsewhere, Reuters cites multiple sources to mention the likelihood of the output cut by OPEC and its allies when and if Iranian production returns depending on the revival of the nuclear deal. During the last week, Saudi Arabian Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman said that OPEC and its allies (OPEC+) may be compelled to reduce oil production.

To sum up, the likely delay in the US-Iran oil deal and OPEC+ output cut could join the looming economic fears to entertain WTI traders. However, the US dollar strength appears the key catalyst to watch, which in turn highlights Friday’s US jobs report for August as an important factor for near-term directions.

Technical analysis

Contrary to the fundamentals, Friday’s Doji candlestick above the 21-DMA, at $90.78 by the press time, could help WTI crude oil buyers again poke the 50-DMA hurdle surrounding $96.10.

Additional important levels

Overview
Today last price 92.56
Today Daily Change -0.22
Today Daily Change % -0.24%
Today daily open 92.78
 
Trends
Daily SMA20 90.74
Daily SMA50 96.75
Daily SMA100 102.63
Daily SMA200 94.98
 
Levels
Previous Daily High 93.88
Previous Daily Low 90.96
Previous Weekly High 95.61
Previous Weekly Low 86.26
Previous Monthly High 109.54
Previous Monthly Low 88.34
Daily Fibonacci 38.2% 92.07
Daily Fibonacci 61.8% 92.76
Daily Pivot Point S1 91.2
Daily Pivot Point S2 89.62
Daily Pivot Point S3 88.27
Daily Pivot Point R1 94.12
Daily Pivot Point R2 95.46
Daily Pivot Point R3 97.04

 

 

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