An Elevator Ride Down In Crude Oil, Expect It To Stop At A Higher Floor

 | Jul 30, 2021 04:57AM ET

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • Monday, July 19, was an ugly day in the oil path
  • The elevator stopped at a higher floor
  • Crude oil did not stay down for long
  • The counter-intuitive move as the US follows a greener energy path
  • Crude oil is heading for triple digits, and gasoline looks set to challenge $3 per gallon

It is hard to believe that fifteen short months ago, the price of nearby NYMEX crude oil futures traded to a record low at negative $40.32 per barrel. An almost perfect bearish storm hit the oil market on Apr. 20, 2020. Discord among OPEC members caused no initial response to the global pandemic that caused energy demand to evaporate. US production rose to a new record high at 13.1 million barrels per day in March 2020. With the price dropping like a stone, contango or the premium for deferred delivery rose to the widest levels in years, if not history. Oil merchants scrambled to buy nearby crude oil and store the energy commodity, selling forwards for futures for deferred delivery. Storage facilities filled until there was nowhere to put the energy commodity. As the nearby futures contract on landlocked WTI NYMEX crude oil futures rolled around in late April, those holding long positions had nowhere to store the petroleum and faced deliveries in Cushing, Oklahoma. Without any storage, buyers who purchased oil at contract lows, zero, and even at negative prices were forced to sell at any prices, pushing the price to the low at over the negative $40 level.

Since then, the crude oil futures market has made higher lows and higher highs. The most recent peak came on July 6, when the energy commodity briefly rose above the October 2018 high and technical resistance level at $76.90 per barrel. Nearby futures hit $76.98, $117.30 above the Apr. 20, 2020 low. Crude oil did not move higher over fifteen months in a straight line. A correction from the new marginal multi-year high was overdue. Crude oil began to experience selling as OPEC+ could not agree on production policy at its biannual meeting. A compromise and news that COVID-19 Delta variant cases were rising set the stage for the first significant price decline in months.

h2 Monday, July 19, was an ugly day in the oil path/h2

Before July, nearby NYMEX crude oil futures suffered the most substantial decline of 2021 in March, when the price dropped from $67.98 to $57.25 per barrel. After reaching the high on Mar. 8, the price found a bottom on Mar. 23. The most significant drop came on Mar. 18, when September futures fell $4.35 per barrel.