Can Crude Oil Prices Hold Above This Key Support Level?

 | Aug 18, 2022 10:12AM ET

Talk of a global recession may prompt a broad decline in Crude oil prices as the excesses of the past 10+ years unwind. This unwinding process pushed to the forefront for traders and investors has been prompted by a massive inflationary expansion after the COVID-19 lockdowns. How will it play out in the short-term and long-term?h2 UNWINDING EXCESS PRICE CYCLE PHASE MAY PUSH CRUDE OIL BELOW $60 PPB/h2

I believe Crude oil will contract as the initial reduction in demand associated with high-priced gasoline and oil products and the threat of a global recession recede. This decline in Crude oil prices is complicated as China/Asia economic and COVID crisis events continue to disrupt consumer discretionary income and asset valuation levels.

Crude oil prices are an excellent measure of consumer engagement and activity worldwide. As the economy grows, demand for Crude oil increases as manufacturers, suppliers, service & support companies, and shipping companies must keep up. When an economy slows or consumers decrease spending habits, Crude oil starts declining as overall demand decreases.

The best way to interpret this is that consumers spend willingly when stocks and home prices skyrocket. Yet, they turn away from spending when stocks and home prices turn downward. It is a natural, psychological reaction to unknowns and stress.

h2 CRITICAL SUPPORT NEAR $87 MAY SOON BE BREACHED/h2

This daily Crude oil chart highlights the key price highs and lows as fractal levels. It is essential to understand that the nearest real support level below $87 is just above $61 for Crude oil. If Crude oil continues to slide downward, I believe a strong downward price trend may occur if the $87 support level is breached.

This would also suggest that a broad energy sector decline could take place over a 30~60-day period as Crude Oil attempts to identify new support. Yet, I believe this downward trend will be temporary in the longer-term scope of Crude oil trends.

After the 2007-08 Global Financial Crisis (GFC), Crude oil collapsed by -77%, from $145 to $34, then rallied +232% to over $113 by 2011. If a global recession phase continues through the end of 2022 or into 2023, I suggest the recovery phase will prompt a solid recovery in Crude oil prices over the next 3+ years.