|

Brent crude surges to best level since July 2015

Crude prices have surged higher today, lifting Brent oil to a new 2017 high. At around $58.80 per barrel, Brent has reached its best level since July 2015. Oil prices have been going higher in recent weeks due first and foremost to evidence that OPEC and Russia’s efforts to reduce the global supply glut was showing positive results and that the group was somewhat surprisingly sticking to their agreement. Indeed, according to the OPEC Secretary-General Mohammad Barkindo, the cartel and its partners had implemented more than 100% of their agreed cuts in August. Talks that the production cuts could be extended has been providing further confidence to oil investors that the rally could be sustained. Everything else is secondary, including North Korean war-talk and anxiety over Kurdish referendum. North Korea is not an oil producer, so I can’t see why the escalation of the situation there would lead to higher oil prices. But Kurdish oil supplies may be hit in the event the Iraqi central government and its neighbouring countries like Turkey and Iran were to isolate the Kurds. A lot of people are also forgetting that demand for oil has been strong, especially from China where the government has been building its strategic petroleum reserve. So, in a nutshell, the fundamental outlook for oil is getting brighter again. However, it remains to be seen what the response from US shale oil producers will be to rising prices. If oil production in the US grows at a faster pace than that of the drawdown in global oil stocks, then this may keep a lid on prices in the medium term. In the long-term, the drive towards alternative energy means the rate of oil demand growth could flatten, which may mean lower prices (assuming everything else is held constant).

As a result of the sharp rally, both oil contracts now appear overbought in the short-term outlook. I therefore think that oil prices may have to retreat a little from these levels before new buyers are tempted to step in again. But essentially, the trend for both oil contracts is bullish and as such more gains could be on the way in the coming days and weeks. Brent crude has traded above the high it had reached in January at $58.35. Given the size of the previous drop from this level, and the extent of today’s rally, it make sense if we see some profit-taking activity now that this level has been taken out. But if and when Brent moves well north of $58.35 and holds there, then the bulls may set their sights on $60 next. Above this psychological hurdle are two additional bullish objectives that are now not too far off at $62.15 (161.8% Fibonacci extension) and $62.80 (old support/resistance area). Meanwhile there are plenty of support levels on the way down, starting with $56.85/90 – Friday’s high. 

Author

Fawad Razaqzada

Fawad Razaqzada

TradingCandles.com

Experience Fawad is an experienced analyst and economist having been involved in the financial markets since 2010 working for leading global FX, CFD and Spread Betting brokerages, most recently at FOREX.com and City Index.

More from Fawad Razaqzada
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD recedes to daily lows near 1.1850

EUR/USD keeps its bearish momentum well in place, slipping back to the area of 1.1850 to hit daily lows on Monday. The pair’s continuation of the leg lower comes amid decent gains in the US Dollar in a context of scarce volatility and thin trade conditions due to the inactivity in the US markets.

GBP/USD resumes the downtrend, back to the low-1.3600s

GBP/USD rapidly leaves behind Friday’s decent advance, refocusing on the downside and retreating to the 1.3630 region at the beginning of the week. In the meantime, the British Pound is expected to remain under the microscope ahead of the release of the key UK labour market report on Tuesday.

Gold looks inconclusive around $5,000

Gold partially fades Friday’s strong recovery, orbiting around the key $5,000 region per troy ounce in a context of humble gains in the Greenback on Monday. Additing to the vacillating mood, trade conditions remain thin amid the observance of the Presidents Day holiday in the US.

Bitcoin consolidates as on-chain data show mixed signals

Bitcoin price has consolidated between $65,700 and $72,000 over the past nine days, with no clear directional bias. US-listed spot ETFs recorded a $359.91 million weekly outflow, marking the fourth consecutive week of withdrawals.

The week ahead: Key inflation readings and why the AI trade could be overdone

It is likely to be a quiet start to the week, with US markets closed on Monday for Presidents Day. European markets are higher across the board and gold is clinging to the $5,000 level after the tamer than expected CPI report in the US reduced haven flows to precious metals.

Monero Price Forecast: XMR risks a drop below $300 under mounting bearish pressure

Monero (XMR) starts the week under pressure, recording a 4% decline at press time on Monday after a 7% drop the previous day, putting the $300 support zone in focus.