Brent crude is down 0.02% to $70.65 per barrel
this week, testing the support range of $68.00–$70.00 per barrel twice but
failing to break below it. This could indicate a potential recovery.
Large investors remain cautious, having
observed the $70.00–$90.00 per barrel range for at least two years. Over this
period, four downside attempts have failed, each followed by a rebound to
$80.00 per barrel. Shorting oil remains a challenge. Last week, large investors
sold United States Oil Fund (USO) shares worth $57.8 million following earlier
sell-offs of $21.9 million, securing a 4–6% profit. This week, they are closing
short positions by purchasing $21.6 million in USO shares, possibly anticipating
that OPEC+ will step in to defend the $68.00–$70.00 support level.
OPEC+ has left its planned production
increases for April unchanged, putting pressure on oil prices. However,
Russia’s Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak indicated that these plans could
change at any time. This creates a deadlock, as there are no clear upside
drivers for oil. The American economy is slowing, and recession fears are
rising, while traders hesitate to push prices lower due to potential OPEC+
intervention.
A new catalyst may be required to break this
stalemate. Possible triggers include lifting sanctions on Russia’s oil sector
following a ceasefire in Ukraine or tightening restrictions if Russia refuses
to engage in peace talks. Iran remains a wildcard, with the potential to disrupt
oil markets by blocking the Strait of Hormuz in response to U.S. pressure.
If the cooling U.S. economy is enough to break
the $68.00–$70.00 support, Brent crude could drop to $58.00–$60.00 per barrel.
However, a more likely scenario is continued trading within the $68.00–$75.00
range.
February U.S. inflation data showed a
sharper-than-expected decline, raising the possibility of Federal Reserve rate
cuts. A second inflation report, the producer price index, is due on Thursday.
If it exceeds expectations, it may indicate that the economy is not cooling as
rapidly as feared. However, if inflation declines more than expected, recession
concerns could intensify. This is unlikely to significantly impact oil prices,
which are expected to remain within the broad $68.00–$75.00 range.
©2000-2025. Todos los derechos reservados.
El sitio es administrado por Teletrade D.J. LLC 2351 LLC 2022 (Euro House, Richmond Hill Road, Kingstown, VC0100, St. Vincent and the Grenadines).
La información presentada en el sitio, no es una base para tomar decisiones de inversión y es proporcionada sólo con fines informativos.
La empresa no atiende ni presta servicio a clientes residentes en Estados Unidos, Canadá y los países incluidos en la lista negra del FATF.
La realización de operaciones comerciales en los mercados financieros con instrumentos financieros de margen, abre grandes oportunidades y permite a los inversores que estén dispuestos a correr riesgos a obtener altos rendimientos, pero al mismo tiempo conlleva un nivel de riesgo de pérdidas potencialmente alto. Por lo tanto, antes de comenzar a comercializar, se debe tomar de manera responsable a la cuestión de elegir la estrategia de inversión correspondiente, teniendo en cuenta los recursos disponibles.
Uso de información: al usar completamente o parcialmente los materiales del sitio, el enlace a TeleTrade como fuente de información es obligatorio. El uso de materiales en Internet debe ir acompañado de un hipervínculo al sitio teletrade.org. Importación automática de materiales e información del sitio está prohibida.
Para cualquier duda o pregunta, póngase en contacto con pr@teletrade.global.