July WTI crude oil slipped below the 50-day moving average at $91.90 on Friday and Spot Brent crude oil is sitting under $96 with a second lower top on the chart at $102.13. he May Nonfarm Payrolls report came in at 172,000 against expectations of 80,000 and the U.S. Dollar Index surged to its strongest level since early April. Washington and Tehran are talking. The Strait of Hormuz could reopen. The strong dollar is pressing crude oil from above and the diplomacy is pulling the risk premium out from below. The charts and the fundamentals are pointing the same direction. Here is the setup.
July WTI Crude Oil Futures are edging lower at the mid-session after crossing to the weak side of the 50-day moving average at $91.90. Trader reaction to this indicator should set the tone into the close.
The market is now reentering retracement zone territory at $91.21 to $87.91. It provided support previously along with a pair of swing bottoms at $86.13 and $86.35.
The formation of the secondary lower top at $97.00 and the 50-day MA crossover are both bearish signs. However, the trend will remain up as long as $86.13 holds as support.
If $86.13 fails, we could see an acceleration to the downside with the main target the long-term retracement zone at $80.24 to $74.35. Inside this zone is the main bottom at $77.22. This area is also the last major support before the 200-day MA at $70.15.
The 50-day MA will determine the direction and tone into the close. Trading on the weak side means more downside pressure later today. Overtaking late in the session could mean another retest of $95.77 to $98.00.
Overall, I think the bias has shifted to the downside with the formation of the secondary lower top at $97.00.
Spot Brent crude oil continues to show weakness with the formation of its second lower top at $102.13. The first one came in at $114.96 on May 18.
Bearish factors are starting to pile up. The market is not only on the weak side of the 50-day moving average at $104.20, but it’s also trading on the bearish side of the moving average at $100.01 to $103.93.
The downside momentum created by this bearish formation could send prices to $94.61 and $93.32. Taking out the latter means that prices are headed to the major support cluster at $89.49 to $88.62. A move into this area is likely to attract buyers since this is a value zone.
Negotiations between Washington and Tehran have made progress and the market is pricing it. The Strait of Hormuz handles nearly one-fifth of the world’s petroleum trade. When it closed earlier this year, crude oil priced in a worst-case supply shock. Traders are no longer pricing that in. They are pricing in the possibility that those barrels come back.
A final agreement is not done. Disagreements remain. But the market does not wait for the handshake. It moves on expectations and right now the expectation is that shipping routes reopen and millions of barrels that were trapped start flowing again. That is why July WTI crude oil dropped below the 50-day moving average on a day when nothing physically changed in the Strait of Hormuz. The risk premium is leaving before the barrels arrive.
The May employment report came in at 172,000 jobs against expectations of 80,000. The U.S. Dollar Index surged to its strongest level since early April. Money markets moved to 98% odds of a rate hike before year-end. The 10-Year U.S. Treasury yield climbed above 4.5%.
A stronger dollar makes crude oil more expensive for every buyer not holding dollars. That cuts into demand from Europe, Asia, and anywhere else refiners are bidding in euros, yen, or yuan. Crude oil was already under pressure from the diplomacy headlines. The payrolls number and the dollar move piled on top of it.
Governments drew down strategic petroleum reserves aggressively during the worst of the crisis. China pulled from existing stockpiles instead of competing for barrels on the open market. That took pressure off global supply chains at a time when every available cargo was getting bid.
Production outside the conflict zone held up better than the market expected. Analysts are now looking for global production growth to exceed consumption growth in the months ahead. That is the kind of outlook that keeps rallies from sticking. Even before the physical surplus shows up, traders start selling into strength because they see it coming.
The energy shock pushed inflation higher across major economies and central banks responded by keeping rates elevated. Higher borrowing costs slow manufacturing, cut transportation demand, and squeeze consumer spending. All of that translates into lower fuel consumption.
U.S. stocks fell on Friday led by technology. The economic growth that supports crude oil demand is under pressure from the same yields and the same strong dollar that are pressing crude oil from the currency side. The demand story is not falling apart but it is not growing fast enough to absorb additional supply if the Strait of Hormuz reopens and Iranian barrels come back to market.
July WTI crude oil broke below the 50-day moving average at $91.90 on Friday. The diplomacy between Washington and Tehran is progressing. The U.S. Dollar Index is at its strongest level since April. The May payrolls number came in more than double expectations and rate hike odds jumped to 98%. Every one of those factors is bearish for crude oil and they all hit on the same day.
The risk premium that carried this market from the March lows to $97 is getting stripped out. Until the diplomacy breaks down or a new supply disruption emerges, the selling pressure stays.
July WTI crude oil is back inside the $91.21 to $87.91 retracement zone with a secondary lower top at $97.00 on the chart. The trend stays up as long as $86.13 holds. A break below it targets $80.24 to $74.35 and the main bottom at $77.22. On Spot Brent crude oil the second lower top at $102.13 and the break below the 50-day moving average at $104.20 have shifted the bias to the downside. The value zone for buyers sits at $89.49 to $88.62.
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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.