Crude Oil Outlook: Yearly Lows vs OPEC Reports
Key Events for the Week Ahead
Oil Market Reports:
- OPEC Monthly Report (Tuesday)
- EIA Short-Term Energy Outlook (Tuesday)
- US Crude Oil Inventories (Wednesday)
- IEA Oil Market Report (Thursday)
Chinese Economic Data:
- Chinese CPI y/y and PPI y/y (Monday)
- Chinese New Loans (Tuesday)
- Chinese Industrial Production and Retail Sales (Saturday)
US Economic Data:
- US CPI y/y, US CPI m/m, and Core CPI m/m (Wednesday)
- US PPI, Core PPI m/m, and Unemployment Claims (Thursday)
Oil Market Reports
As oil stands at critical yearly lows, higher weight can be attributed to the upcoming monthly reports and outlooks from OPEC, IEA, and EIA this week. The supply production quotas that were forecasted to be elevated during October have reached a turning point given the respective yearly weakness of oil prices.
OPEC’s intervention with supply cuts at the start of 2024 significantly boosted gains, in line with broader market sentiment around potential rate cuts. This scenario presents a potential déjà vu, as the alignment of policies and the growth in global demand outlook mirrors previous patterns. Should this alignment fail, however, further weakness could push prices toward the lower end of the $60 range.
Chinese Economic Data
Tough headwinds on oil prices were rippled from the Chinese economy as it hit 15-year lows with new loans and foreign direct investment, alongside a weaker-than-expected manufacturing PMI data.
Upcoming indicators, including Chinese inflation, new loans, retail sales, and industrial production, will shed further light on the Chinese economy's trajectory and its impact on global oil demand and price levels.
US Economic Data
The final determination of the rate cut magnitude—currently priced at a 70% probability for a 25bp cut and a 30% probability for a 50bp cut, according to the CME Fed Watch Tool—will likely be influenced by the upcoming US CPI indicators. The latest non-farm payrolls data strengthened the US Dollar's position against the market, as it exceeded expectations with an addition of 142,000 jobs, compared to the previous 89,000.
Subsequent comments from Fed members Williams and Waller have further supported the likelihood of a rate cut, citing the slowing inflation and a moderating labor market.
Technical Outlook
Crude Oil Analysis: USOIL – Weekly Timeframe – Log Scale
Source: Tradingview
Oil continues to decline after a bearish breakout from its consolidation range, entering a high-volatility zone marked by sharp rebounds between May and June 2023. The first support level to watch is near $65.30. A close below $65 could signal further declines toward the $60 and $58 levels.
If oil manages to repeat a volatile pattern in the following 68 zone, alongside the resurgence of positive fundamentals on the commodity, levels 71 and 76 are ready to offer the next resistance levels alongside its primary bearish pattern.
High volatility can be expected near the $67-$68 price range, given past sharp rebounds from this area, potential market interventions, and irregular supply disruptions due to geopolitical tensions.
--- Written by Razan Hilal, CMT on X: @Rh_waves
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