Crude Oil Sidesteps Trade War Fears, Inventory Drawdowns Continue

Fundamental Forecast for USOIL: Bullish

Talking Points:

  • The ONE Thing: Crude oil traders witnessed a clearly bullish report as the weekly Department of Energy data showed an aggressive draw at -12.633mn barrels against the expected -3.9mn. The draw was the largest seen since September 2016.
  • Per BHI, U.S. Oil Rig Count remains flat at 863, US total count at 1,054
  • The factors that seem to be holding back prices were likely the build in distillates of +4.125mn barrels in addition to the broader risk sentiment dip that was seen this week on the escalation of trade wars.
  • Crude sees the largest intraweek decline in five months

The current uptrend in crude oil is a little over a year old, and traders remain on the fence as to whether the price of Oil is about to take a new leg higher toward $77/bbl for WTI or $89/bbl for Brent. The hesitancy to bid prices higher despite the massive DoE draw on Wednesday and no new oil rigs added on Friday is likely due to the options skew that is pricing less upside potential for oil and weakening physical structure as backwardation lessens.

Another dark cloud hanging over the commodities market is the trade war. The dark cloud was evidenced by China’s crude imports falling in June by 12% to 8.39 million b/d, the lowest level since December, per the General Administration of Customs in Beijing.

As of Friday, the weekly loss on WTI & Brent crude was 3.35 & 2.14% respectively, which is up from an intraweek low of 5% after US President Trump applied tariffs on nearly 50% of US imports from China escalating concerns about the US-Sino trade war.

The Massive DoE Drawdown Was the Largest Since September 2016

Data source: Bloomberg

Once again, WTI and Brent crude has become the market everyone is discussing! Unlock our forecast here

Crude Oil Holds Above Broad Support with Concerning Macro Fundamentals

Chart Source: Pro Real Time with IG UK Price Feed. Created by Tyler Yell, CMT

After breaking below $70/bbl on Thursday to a weekly low of 69.23 and the lowest level since late July, WTI crude and Brent have since rebounded though they’re still in the red on the week. Despite the pullback from the July Opening Range high of $75.27 traders are still having a hard time betting aggressively on further sequential weakness. If anything, traders are less bullish, yet, not outright bearish, which aligns with the charts.

One the chart above, WTI bounced off the Ichimoku cloud and above the 50% retracement of the 2014-2016 range as support. The strong move favors continuation of the broad uptrend. The weekly low of $69.23 is an appropriate bias point to hold a bullish view. A break and close below $69.23 from here would warn of further weakness despite the crude inventory drawdown.

Technical resistance, which is important given the recent reversal is coming off of 3-year highs would be at $74.70/bbl, which is the July 10 high. A close above there would align with the chart patterns that a move toward the trendline and 61.8% retracement of the 2014-2016 range near $77/bbl remains in play.

Next Week’s Data Points That May Affect Energy Markets:

The fundamental focal points for the energy market next week:

  • Monday: U.S. President Donald Trump and Russian President Vladimir Putin hold their first summit
  • Tuesday 4:30 PM ET: API Weekly Oil Inventories Report
  • Wednesday 10:30 AM ET: EIA issues weekly US Oil Inventory Report
  • Wednesday: JODI issues oil export and output data for May
  • Thursday: API’s Monthly Statistical Report
  • Friday 1:00 PM ET: Baker-Hughes Rig Count
  • Friday 3:30 PM ET: Release of the CFTC weekly commitments of traders report on U.S. futures, options contracts

—Written by Tyler Yell, CMT

Tyler Yell is a Chartered Market Technician. Tyler provides Technical analysis that is powered by fundamental factors on key markets as well as trading educational resources. Read more of Tyler’s Technical reports via his bio page.

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