Crude Left Wanting Bullish Cues, Gold Dumped As USD Gains

 | Aug 21, 2014 06:36AM ET

h3 Crude Lacking Fuel To Lead A Recovery

Crude Oil remains in a precarious position as escalating tensions in Iraq fail to spark fear-driven buying of the commodity. Similarly, the precious metals are exposed to further weakness as traders look past geopolitical turmoil alongside a stronger greenback. Finally, Copper’s recovery could prove short-lived following a disappointing set of Chinese manufacturing figures, which may rekindle fears of a more severe growth deceleration.

Crude is drifting lower during the Asian session with an absence of major catalysts to spark a recovery for the commodity. Brent’s lackluster response to a flare-up in the ongoing Iraqi turmoil suggests traders have become desensitized to fresh news flow from the OPEC producer. This may be warranted given that supply disruptions due to the conflict have thus far proven minimal, if not non-existent.

A mixed set of inventories figures from the Department of Energy on Wednesday also left the commodity lacking fuel. A positive signal offered by a decline in total crude stocks was offset by a jump in supplies at Cushing. US production also rose to a level just shy of its 2014 peak, which was the highest rate since 1986. However, perhaps more concerning than the rate of production is the near parabolic increase over recent years (see chart below).

With developments in the Middle East proving insufficient to yield a recovery for the WTI and Brent benchmarks the pair are left wanting for catalysts to spur a bounce. Nonetheless, the speed and magnitude of recent declines may afford some profit taking on short positions and slight recovery for crude oil.