Light crude oil futures settled the week at $62.40, up just $0.06, or +0.10%, after a volatile stretch dominated by bearish macro fundamentals and waning demand signals.
Despite the modest gain, futures closed below key levels—including the 52-week moving average at $63.09 and the long-term pivot at $64.21—confirming sustained downside pressure on crude.
The bearish tone is rooted in persistent oversupply concerns. OPEC’s trimmed output curbs have failed to meaningfully tighten the market, while Russian crude exports remain largely unaffected by sanctions.
According to industry analysts, continued flows from sanctioned producers are flooding an already well-supplied global market. U.S. production remains robust, adding further weight to the supply side of the equation.
Traders have also been unimpressed by recent geopolitical events. Despite Ukrainian drone strikes on Russian energy infrastructure—including export terminals and refineries—disruption has proven limited and transient. This has eroded the geopolitical risk premium that had previously supported prices.
Fundamentals on the demand side are equally underwhelming. While the Federal Reserve implemented a widely expected 25 basis point rate cut, the move has failed to lift crude demand expectations. Weak U.S. economic data—ranging from slumping homebuilding activity to tepid job market figures—has deepened skepticism about future energy consumption.
Analysts note that without stronger demand recovery or more aggressive monetary easing, rate cuts will have limited impact on crude markets. “A symbolic cut won’t drive oil demand unless it spurs real economic momentum,” one strategist said. Instead, the rate move has simply underscored macroeconomic fragility.
Further reinforcing the bearish bias, the latest EIA report revealed a surprise 4 million barrel build in U.S. distillate inventories, suggesting weakening diesel demand. This followed earlier API data showing similar trends. Combined with strong exports and reduced net imports, the inventory data reflects a domestic market increasingly cautious on refined product consumption.
The near-term oil prices forecast remains bearish. Crude’s failure to reclaim the $64.21 pivot or the 52-week average at $63.09 keeps downside targets firmly in play. Key support rests at $60.77, followed by the Fibonacci level at $59.91.
Unless OPEC+ revises its strategy or demand metrics improve, crude is likely to remain under pressure with rallies capped near $65.68. Traders should expect continued selling on strength until fundamentals shift.
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James Hyerczyk is a U.S. based seasoned technical analyst and educator with over 40 years of experience in market analysis and trading, specializing in chart patterns and price movement. He is the author of two books on technical analysis and has a background in both futures and stock markets.