There has been a tug of war in the oil price over the past two
weeks. Due to a very rare setup in the market, the oil price has traded
in a very narrow range as traders fight it out to see who will win control…
the BULLS or the BEARS. My bet is on the bet is on the
bears. Amazingly, the oil price is literally stuck right between
two critical technical levels.
Ever since the oil price peaked at $77 at the beginning of October, it has
fallen $25 and is now trading in a tight volatile range between
$50-$53. As we can see in the chart below, the oil price dropped to $50
at the end of November and now has been trading up and down with no clear
direction:
Oil Price Daily Chart (Each candlestick = 1 day of trading)
Even though the oil price touched $54 for a few days, it has mostly been
trading in a tight $3 range. In looking at this daily chart, we have no
idea why the oil price is behaving in such a way. However, if we look
at the longer-term monthly chart, we can see the apparent reason why.
The oil price has been pushed between the 50 Month Moving Average (BLUE)
and the 300 Month Moving Average (ORANGE):
Oil Price Monthly Chart (Each candlestick = 1 month of trading)
If you look at the magnified view, you will see that the oil price that
closed today at $52.58 remains between these two moving averages. The
large red candlestick shows the decline in the oil price in November as each
candlestick represents one month of trading. So, the current
candlestick that looks like a Cross (called dogi) is for the first two weeks
of trading in December. Thus, the reason the oil price in the first
daily chart above hasn’t moved from the narrow range can be found by looking
at the monthly chart.
It is a rare occurrence for two monthly moving averages to
meet together and even more extraordinary when the oil price is trading
between them. Now, if we look at the oil chart a week ago (Dec
7th), it looks almost the same:
Oil Price Monthly Chart
This monthly chart of oil was taken on Dec 7th, and that day the price
closed at $52.61, just 7 cents less than the end of day price today.
With the oil price stuck between these two technical levels, traders are
fighting it out to see who wins. However, I believe the bears will
eventually win by pulling the price lower.
This next chart shows how the technical levels also guide the oil price in
the WEEKLY chart:
Oil Price Weekly Chart (Each candlestick = 1 week of trading)
You will notice that the oil price topped at the 400 Week Moving Average (PINK)
and is now trading around the 200 Week Moving Average (GREEN).
In looking at this oil price weekly chart and the RSI indicator on the top,
it seems oversold. Which means the oil price may move higher first
before continuing to head lower. But, if we look at a more extended
5-year weekly chart, the oil price can sell-off a GREAT DEAL MORE:
Oil Price Weekly Chart (5-years)
When the oil price was trending lower in 2015 and 2016, it continued to
sell off in December during both years (TWO BLACK ARROWS).
As the U.S. economy continues to roll over along with a weak oil price and
falling demand in the winter, I believe the oil price will likely fall
towards the $40 level.
If the oil price continues to fall to $40 and possibly $30, it will
destroy the already weak U.S. shale oil industry. To make matters even
worse, the companies producing shale in the North Dakota Bakken are receiving
a whopping $25.75 a barrel. According to the extensive list of global
oil spot prices (100+) published on OilPrice.com,
the North Dakota Williston Sweet crude price plunged nearly $4o from
its high in October when it was trading at $64.
So, if you are an investor in one of the shale companies in the Bakken,
like Continental Resources, you have my sympathy.
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