Near term crude oil outlook:
The market has indeed continued sharply lower from the Nov 3rd high at $48.36 and "ideal" area to form a more important top (see email from that day), with declines toward that Aug 24th low at $37.75 and even below still favored. Note that the action from Aug is seen as a large correction (wave 4 in the decline from the May 6th high at $62.58), was "completed" at the Oct 9th high at $50.92 (A-B-C), and targets those new lows. Weak technicals (see sell mode on the daily macd) and the seasonal chart that is lower into late Dec (see 3rd chart below) continue to support this long held bearish view. On a short term basis, there is some risk for a week or 2 of consolidating, but would be seen as a correction and with a resumption of the declines after (see in red on daily chart below). Nearby resistance is at the broken base of the bull channel from Sept/neckline of the head and shoulders pattern (currently at $42.25/50), with a break/close above increasing the likelihood of that near term period of consolidating. Further resistance above there is seen at the bearish trendline from June (currently at $47.25/50). Nearby support is seen at the widely discussed $39.85/10 area (Nov 16th low, likely stops below). Bottom line: declines below the Aug low at $37.75 still favored, some risk for a week or 2 of consolidating on the way lower.

Strategy/position:
Still short from the Nov 3rd resell at $47.92. For now would switch the stop to a close $0.25 above the broken neckline of that head and shoulders as it would argue that week or 2 of correcting (and would be looking to resell higher if taken out). Note had been using stop on a close $0.25 above that bearish trendline from the Nov 3rd high, but the pace of further downside is likely to slow at a minimum.

Long term outlook:
No change as the view over the last few months of eventual declines below that Aug low at $37.75 continues to unfold. Longer term however, such new lows may be limited, part of a longer term bottoming and versus the start of a more major, new tumble. Note that a decline below the $37.75 low would be seen as the final downleg in the fall from the May high (wave 5) as the well as the longer term fall from the Aug 2013 high at $112.24 (wave V). Additionally, long term technicals did no confirm that Aug low (see bullish divergence on the weekly macd for example), downside momentum has been slowing for the last year and appear to be forming a large falling wedge/reversal pattern over that time. Key long term support below $37.75 is seen at the year long falling trendline/base of the wedge (currently at $34.00/50) and would be an "ideal" area to form a more major bottom (see in red on weekly chart/2nd chart below). A final comment....the long discussed view of downside (potentially final "washout" before completing major bottoms) into mid/late Dec across a number commodities (gold, copper, etc.) and commodity currencies (A$, new highs in $/cad, etc.) is indeed playing out. Bottom line: declines below $37.75 still favored, but may be limited in the bigger picture, and part of a more major bottoming.

Strategy/position:
Reversed the longer term bullish bias that was put in place on Aug 27th at $40.00 to bearish on Sept 3rd at $48.00. 
chart1chart2

Recommended Content


Recommended Content

Editors’ Picks

EUR/USD clings to gains above 1.0750 after US data

EUR/USD clings to gains above 1.0750 after US data

EUR/USD manages to hold in positive territory above 1.0750 despite retreating from the fresh multi-week high it set above 1.0800 earlier in the day. The US Dollar struggles to find demand following the weaker-than-expected NFP data.

EUR/USD News

GBP/USD declines below 1.2550 following NFP-inspired upsurge

GBP/USD declines below 1.2550 following NFP-inspired upsurge

GBP/USD struggles to preserve its bullish momentum and trades below 1.2550 in the American session. Earlier in the day, the disappointing April jobs report from the US triggered a USD selloff and allowed the pair to reach multi-week highs above 1.2600.

GBP/USD News

Gold struggles to hold above $2,300 despite falling US yields

Gold struggles to hold above $2,300 despite falling US yields

Gold stays on the back foot below $2,300 in the American session on Friday. The benchmark 10-year US Treasury bond yield stays in negative territory below 4.6% after weak US data but the improving risk mood doesn't allow XAU/USD to gain traction.

Gold News

Bitcoin Weekly Forecast: Should you buy BTC here? Premium

Bitcoin Weekly Forecast: Should you buy BTC here?

Bitcoin (BTC) price shows signs of a potential reversal but lacks confirmation, which has divided the investor community into two – those who are buying the dips and those who are expecting a further correction.

Read more

Week ahead – BoE and RBA decisions headline a calm week

Week ahead – BoE and RBA decisions headline a calm week

Bank of England meets on Thursday, unlikely to signal rate cuts. Reserve Bank of Australia could maintain a higher-for-longer stance. Elsewhere, Bank of Japan releases summary of opinions.

Read more

Majors

Cryptocurrencies

Signatures