Oil Set To Tank: Bear Strategies To Profit From It

 | Feb 06, 2018 01:38AM ET

Oil charts are showing that the commodity is set to decline, says technical analyst Clive Maund, who discusses trading strategies.

The sharp drop in the bond market and stock market late last week, especially on Friday, is believed to mark the start of a long and brutal bear market, exacerbated by the attempt to deleverage massive debt. Since bear markets are not noted for being characterized by expansion in demand, the onset of a severe recession or depression in due course can be expected to have a serious negative impact on demand for oil, with another more immediate negative factor for oil being that any sustained increase in prices, such as we have already seen, will result in a ramping of production in the US that will negatively impact prices as well.

Thus we can see that "the writing is on the wall" already for oil which can be expected to break down from its uptrend in force from last July to enter a prolonged and potentially severe downtrend. As you are already aware, we have been looking for oil to go into reverse for some weeks now, and now it has the perfect excuse, a falling stock market, and the drop by oil stocks in sympathy with the drop in stocks generally on Friday portends a downtrend in oil.

This article is not an exercise in idle observation of what of going on, for we plan to make money out of this impending and imminent oil drop, while most others are losing it, but become we come to details of how to profitably play it, we will first look at the latest charts for oil itself and the oil stocks index.

We start with the 7-month chart for Light Crude on which we see that having hit a target at the upper boundary of its steeper uptrend channel several weeks ago, it has been bumping along the underside of it since, and while this chart by itself looks fairly innocuous, with little sign of a serious downturn, such is not the case with the latest COT and Hedgers' charts, which are the stuff of nightmares—unless you are short that is (short the oil market, not short in stature). Before leaving this chart, observe how the MACD indicators has dropped below its moving average, which is viewed as a warning, and the now large gap between the price and the 200-day moving average, which makes at least a correction more likely.