Crude Oil Braces For Further Swings

 | Aug 18, 2014 04:17AM ET

Crude Oil is edging lower in Asian trading, erasing some of Friday’s dramatic gains. The commodity has demonstrated a hyper-sensitivity to news flow related to geopolitical turmoil, which may leave it in store for further volatility over the week ahead. Meanwhile, Gold and Silver are in a precarious position as the latest flare-up in regional tensions has proven insufficient to support the precious metals.

Geopolitical Developments Catalyze Commodity Volatility

Incoming news flow surrounding the ongoing conflicts in Eastern Europe and Iraq may see crude oil continue its wild price swings. The WTI benchmark soared on Friday to post its largest daily percentage gain in more than a month as newswires reported escalating tensions in Ukraine and the Middle East.

Speculation over crude supply disruptions from Russian and Iraqi holds the potential to spark fear-driven buying of WTI and Brent. Palladium has also likely benefited from concerns over supply from Russia (the world’s largest producer of the metal). The commodity has climbed to its highest level in more than 13 years after rallying for eight consecutive trading days.

However, looking past the headlines production impediments related to the ongoing sagas have proven minimal at this stage (if not non-existent). This suggests that any related risk-premium built into prices could quickly evaporate, leaving the commodity vulnerable to declines.

Haven Demand Deteriorates

The latest geopolitical flare-ups have proven insufficient to bolster safe-haven demand for gold and silver. The yellow metal has continued its descent during the Asian session today, extending Friday’s decline of 0.67 percent.

Ongoing uncertainty surrounding Eastern Europe could slow the precious metals fall. However, without a material escalation it remains to be seen what could cause investors to return to gold and sustain a recovery for the precious metal.

CRUDE OIL TECHNICAL ANALYSIS

Downside risks remain for crude with the recent recovery being viewed as a corrective bounce at this stage, rather than the beginning of a reversal. A sustained downtrend alongside negative momentum (signaled by the ROC) suggests the potential for further weakness over the coming weeks. A daily close above the descending trendline and 98.90 barrier would be required to signal a shift in sentiment to the upside and to mark a small base.

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