Crude Oil

Fundamental Forecast for : Neutral

Talking Points:

  • The ONE Thing: Emerging markets like China, Turkey, & South Africa dominated the news flow and continued to be a cause for concern about whether or not demand is waning for energy.
  • Seven straight weekly losses would account for the longest losing streak since 2015
  • Per BHI, U.S. total rig count remained at 1057; Hedge Funds cut bets to a 13-month low
  • The technical picture warrants focus for strong bullish support at 200-DMA ($65.71)
  • Bullish catalysts are dissipating as bearish concerns mount up. The key fear was stoked from energy-hungry emerging markets that saw a route last week with South Africa, China, & Turkey in the headlines.

    The one thing that isn’t missing is oil supply. In addition to US crude inventories rising the most since 2017, OPEC has been increasing production, as promised, as Libra restored lost production.

    Chart watchers can see that Oil has moved to the 200-DMA, and even pushed below $65/bbl this week, which has held as a psychological level for many market participants. Adding to the lack of current upside pressure is hedge funds who have reduced positions to a 13-month low per the ICE.

    Short-term storm clouds do not mean that bullish prospects are absent. There remains a concern over Iranian sanctions cutting off a major supply source with US President Trump barking at any country that was intending to buy Iranian Oil after the sanctions were enforced. Institutions like Citi think this could mean some 600-1,200k barrels coming off the market due to the sanctions.

    Another emerging theme this week that will likely begin to haunt the headlines is the International Maritime Organization (IMO) 2020 plan to reduce the freight emissions of sulfur oxides by January 2020. Roughly 90% of world trade moves by water and the rule would require lighter sweet crude to be used by the monsters of the sea could bake in a sharp premium of WTI & Brent compared to higher-sulfur containing fuels that come from lower quality oil.