Oil Trading Alert originally sent to subscribers on August 19, 2015, 8:20 AM.
Trading position (short-term; our opinion): No positions are justified from the risk/reward perspective.
On Tuesday, crude oil gained 1.17% as hopes that crude oil inventories could decline for a third consecutive week weighed on investors’ sentiment. Thanks to these circumstances, light crude bounced off its key support line, but will we see the commodity above $43 in near future?
Yesterday, the Commerce Department showed that housing starts rose 0.2% to the highest level since October 2007, which pushed the USD Index above 97. What’s interesting, although the greenback moved higher against other currencies, crude oil didn’t extend its losses, showing some strength. Does it mean that investors’ sentiment has improved and higher values of the commodity are ahead us? Let’s examine the technical picture of light crude and find out where it will head next (charts courtesy of http://stockcharts.com).
From today’s point of view we see that although crude oil moved little lower after the market’s open, the combination of the recent multi-month low and the key support line (marked with red) encouraged oil bulls to act. As a result, light crude rebounded and climbed above the previously-broken March low, hitting an intraday high of $42.90.
Despite this increase, the proximity to the nearest solid resistance zone (created by the green and blue lines) triggered a pullback and the commodity closed the day a few cents below the March low. What’s next? Taking into the current position of the indictors (there are positive divergences and the Stochastic Oscillator generated a buy signal – not strong, but still) it seems that the space for declines is limited and further improvement is just around the corner.
Nevertheless, in our opinion, as long as there is no invalidation of the breakdown under green and blue lines, higher prices of the commodity are questionable and another test of the red declining support line (currently around $41.16) can’t be ruled out. However, if oil bulls manage to push crude oil above $43-$43.58, the way to $45.34 (the Aug 11 high) would be open.
Finishing today’s alert please note that yesterday, after the market’s open, the American Petroleum Institute reported that crude oil inventories declined by 2.3 million barrels last week, beating expectations for a 2.0 million barrel drop. If today’s EIA report confirms another drop (or shows a bigger-than-expected decline), oil bulls would have another argument to push the commodity higher.
Summing up, crude oil bounced off the recent low and the key support line, closing the day slightly below the March low. Taking this fact into account, and combining with the current position of the indicators (and another weekly drop in crude oil inventories showed by the API), it seems to us that oil bulls will try to push the commodity higher. Nevertheless, the outlook for crude oil is not clear enough to justify opening any positions. We will continue to monitor the market, look for another profitable trading opportunity and report to you accordingly.
Very short-term outlook: mixed
Short-term outlook: mixed
MT outlook: mixed with bearish bias
LT outlook: mixed with bearish bias
Trading position (short-term; our opinion): No positions are justified from the risk/reward perspective. We will keep you – our subscribers – informed should anything change.
Thank you.
Nadia Simmons
Forex & Oil Trading Strategist
Przemyslaw Radomski, CFA
Founder, Editor-in-chief
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