gold investment, silver investment

Oil Trading Alert: Crude Oil – Breakdown or Trap?

June 18, 2014, 1:32 PM

Oil Trading Alert originally sent to subscribers on June 18, 2014, 11:12 AM.

Trading position (short-term; our opinion): Speculative short positions in crude oil seem to be justified from the risk/reward perspective.

On Tuesday, the price of crude oil wobbled between gains and losses throughout the session as mixed data and profit taking weighed on investors’ sentiment. As a result, light crude reversed after an increase to the resistance zone and declined below an important medium-term support line. Will this event be strong enough to trigger a sizable correction?

As you know from our previous Oil Trading Alerts, the major factor that has driven crude oil higher in recent days was the deteriorating situation in Iraq - the seventh-largest oil producer in the world last year and OPEC's second-most-important producer country. Because of the Iraqi crisis, light crude increased to a nine-month high, but it seems that the impact of the Iraq violence on the price could be short-lived as investors figured out that active oilfields remain far south from the insurgency and disruption fears are overdone – especially when we take into account the fact that U.S. oil production is booming and most of that oil cannot be exported under current law.

Additionally, mixed data encouraged oil investors to jump to the sidelines. Yesterday, the Commerce Department reported that housing starts dropped by 6.5% in May, while the number of building permits issued fell by 6.4% in the previous month. Although these numbers disappointed, upbeat inflation data supported crude oil. Please note that the Labor Department reported that the U.S. CPI rose 2.1% on year in May and 0.4% from April.

How did these circumstances influence the technical picture? Let’s check (charts courtesy of http://stockcharts.com).

WTI Crude Oil weekly chart

Looking at the weekly chart, we see that the situation has deteriorated slightly as crude oil moved lower and reached the rising black support line. If it holds, we will likely see another attempt to break above the long-term declining line, which triggered a pullback earlier this week. However, taking into account the position of the indicators (the CCI and Stochastic Oscillator are overbought), it seems to us that further deterioration is just around the corner – especially if crude oil breaks below its major medium-term support line (marked with black).

Will we see such price action in the coming days? Let’s take a closer look at the daily chart.

WTI Crude Oil daily chart

In our last Oil Trading Alert, we wrote the following:

(…) the initial downside target for oil bears will be the previously-broken medium-term black rising line (currently around $106.60), which stopped further deterioration on Friday. (…) if this line holds, we may see another attempt to break above the resistance zone. However, if it is broken, the current correction will accelerate and the commodity will find support around $104.55, where the upper line of the medium-term triangle (marked with blue) is.

From this perspective, we see that although oil bulls tried to realized the above-mentioned scenario, they failed and the commodity declined under the medium-term black rising line, closing the day slightly below it. In our opinion, this is a bearish signal, which suggests further deterioration. We are convinced that the current correction will accelerate, if light crude drops under the black dashed support line (currently around $105.95) and the CCI and Stochastic Oscillator generate sell signals. In this case, the above-mentioned downside target around $104.55 will be in play. Meanwhile, as long as crude oil remains around its black support line, another try to climb above the resistance zone can’t be ruled out.

Summing up, although crude oil moved higher, the strong resistance zone created by the long-term declining line and two important Fibonacci retracement levels triggered a pullback, which took the commodity below the medium-term black rising line. Taking this fact into account, we remain bearish and think that if light crude declines from here, we’ll see a drop to at least the medium-term blue support line (around $104.55).

Very short-term outlook: bearish
Short-term outlook: mixed with bearish bias
MT outlook: mixed
LT outlook: mixed

Trading position (short-term): Short. Stop-loss order at $109.20. We will keep you informed should anything change, or should we see a confirmation/invalidation of the above.

Thank you.

Nadia Simmons
Forex & Oil Trading Strategist
Przemyslaw Radomski, CFA
Founder, Editor-in-chief

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