Who Are The Winners And Losers From $70+ Oil?

 | May 22, 2018 11:49AM ET

From $145 to $35 to $115 to nearly $25 and now to back above $70, the price action in the oil market has been a roller coaster for a full decade now, and the question on every trader’s mind is “how far will we rise before dumping again…and what does that mean for other markets?”

From a fundamental perspective, the price of oil has some clearly bullish tailwinds. According to a survey conducted by Reuters, OPEC’s oil output fell to a one-year low of 32.12 million barrels per day last month on the back of declining production in Venezuela and lower shipments from African producers. US President Trump’s decision earlier this month to pull out of the Iran nuclear deal and reimpose sanctions on the country (the world’s fifth largest oil producer) is unlikely to help matters. Meanwhile, on the demand side of the equation, the IMF predicts that global growth will accelerate to a 3.9% growth rate in both 2018 and 2019, which should keep demand for oil products elevated in the near term.

Technically speaking, the oil market remains in a clear uptrend since bottoming in early 2016 and that bullish trend has only accelerated over the last year, with WTI gaining more than 70% off last June’s lows. After rising five of the last six weeks, the commodity is looking stretched in the short term, but given the established uptrend and bullish fundamental picture, traders will likely look to buy any near-term dips.