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Oil Trading Alert: Crude Oil – Keep Focused

January 24, 2017, 8:50 AM Nadia Simmons

Trading position (short-term; our opinion): Short positions (with a stop-loss order at $56.45 and an initial downside target at $45.81) are justified from the risk/reward perspective.

On Monday, crude oil lost 0.88% as oil investors reacted to Friday’s Baker Hughes’ report. As a reminder, it showed that U.S. drillers added 29 rigs, which was the biggest increase in almost four years. As a result, light crude reversed once again and closed the day below $53. What’s next for the black gold?

Today’s alert is going to be very brief, because although crude oil moved a bit higher after the market’s open, the commodity reversed very quickly and declined under $53. This means that light crude is still trading under last Tuesday’s high and the double top formation and the potential head and shoulders pattern remain in place, suggesting another attempt to move lower in the coming days.

Therefore, if you haven’t had the chance to read yesterday’s alert, we encourage you to do so today - it’s up-to-date:

Oil Trading Alert: Further Rally or Trap?

As always, we’ll keep you - our subscribers - informed should anything change.

As a reminder – “initial target price” means exactly that – an “initial” one, it’s not a price level at which we suggest closing positions. If this becomes the case (like it did in the previous trade) we will refer to these levels as levels of exit orders (exactly as we’ve done previously). Stop-loss levels, however, are naturally not “initial”, but something that, in our opinion, might be entered as an order.

Since it is impossible to synchronize target prices and stop-loss levels for all the ETFs and ETNs with the main market that we provide this level for (crude oil), the stop-loss level and target price for popular ETN and ETF (among other: USO, DWTI, UWTI) are provided as supplementary, and not as “final”. This means that if a stop-loss or a target level is reached for any of the “additional instruments” (DWTI for instance), but not for the “main instrument” (crude oil in this case), we will view positions in both crude oil and DWTI as still open and the stop-loss for DWTI would have to be moved lower. On the other hand, if crude oil moves to a stop-loss level but DWTI doesn’t, then we will view both positions (in crude oil and DWTI) as closed. In other words, since it’s not possible to be 100% certain that each related instrument moves to a given level when the underlying instrument does, we can’t provide levels that would be binding. The levels that we do provide are our best estimate of the levels that will correspond to the levels in the underlying assets, but it will be the underlying assets that one will need to focus on regarding the sings pointing to closing a given position or keeping it open. We might adjust the levels in the “additional instruments” without adjusting the levels in the “main instruments”, which will simply mean that we have improved our estimation of these levels, not that we changed our outlook on the markets.

Thank you.

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

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