Crude Oil Hits A Speedbump. Why That's Bullish For Traders

 | Apr 02, 2021 03:11AM ET

This article was written exclusively for Investing.com

  • A high on Mar. 8 after OPEC+’s decision and an attack on Saudi production
  • Elevator ride lower on Mar. 18
  • Crude oil’s geopolitical dynamics have changed
  • Going into peak season for gasoline demand could be turbocharged in 2021
  • Buying the dip in crude oil for the coming months

We are coming up on the first anniversary of crude oil’s descent below zero on the nearby NYMEX Crude oil futures contract. On Apr. 20, 2020, the expiring May contract not only fell into negative territory, but it also plunged below negative $40 per barrel.

Market participants holding long positions without the ability to take delivery and store the energy commodity had to sell at any price since the NYMEX contract calls for West Texas Intermediate crude oil, landlocked petroleum. Nearby ICE Brent futures also declined, but they hit bottom at $16 per barrel, the lowest level of this century. Brent remained in positive territory because the seaborne petroleum had storage options available to longs.

The global pandemic of 2020 caused demand to fall to unprecedented levels. One year later, optimism that vaccines create herd immunity to the virus pushed NYMEX WTI crude oil to nearly $69 per barrel and Brent above the $71 level. Meanwhile, the energy commodity hit a speed bump in mid-March. On Mar. 18, crude oil became a falling knife, posting the worst daily performance in 2021 and since last April.

h2 A high on Mar. 8 after OPEC+’s decision and an attack on Saudi production/h2

On Mar. 8, crude oil prices rose to new post-pandemic highs. OPEC+’s decision to keep production quotas steady and an Iranian-backed attack on Saudi petroleum infrastructure pushed the energy commodity’s price to a peak.