Oil Remains Volatile Amid Uncertainty Over Production Cuts

 | Apr 06, 2020 05:45PM ET

When OPEC and Russia decided to flood the world with crude oil on March 6, the price fell to its lowest level since 2002. The first sign that crude oil was in trouble came in January 2020, when the energy commodity put in a bearish reversal trading pattern on the monthly chart. On Jan. 8, the price rose to $65.65 per barrel on the back of hostilities between the U.S. and Iran in Iraq. The peak during the first month of this year was higher than the high from December 2019. As calm returned to the Middle East, the price closed January below the low from the previous month, causing the bearish price pattern.

At the end of the first quarter of this year, crude oil put in the same pattern on the long-term quarterly chart. Oil fell to a low of $19.27 on the nearby NYMEX futures contract in March.

Last week, as speculative shorts continued to move into the oil arena, the prospects for a deal that would stabilize the price of the energy commodity began to take shape. In early March, Russia and Saudi Arabia’s attempt to push the price of petroleum to a level that would end U.S. oil independence wound up shooting the other two leading producers of the energy commodity in their own feet. At below $20 per barrel, no producer can emerge a winner. And, the demand destruction on the back of the global pandemic means that consumers that are locked in their homes cannot enjoy the benefits of lower energy costs. After reaching a low at the start of last week, the price of oil suddenly recovered on the prospect of a win-win deal between the world’s three top producing countries. The United States Oil Fund, LP (NYSE:USO) tracks the price of the energy commodity higher and lower on a short-term basis.

A Move From The Low Last Week

Significant price volatility continued to grip the oil market last week as the price dropped to a new low at $19.27 per barrel on the nearby NYMEX futures contract on Monday, March 30.