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Energy & Precious Metals - Weekly Review and Outlook

Published 09/18/2022, 05:36 AM
Updated 09/18/2022, 06:02 AM
© Reuters

By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com - Moves in oil were as riveting as those on the Ukraine front this week. Given that Vladimir Putin has turned global energy prices into a referendum on his war, perhaps it shouldn’t be surprising. Yet it was. After nearly seven months into the invasion of Ukraine, the fortunes of both oil bulls and the Russian president's “special military operation” didn’t appear that special, after all.

​​Crude prices settled flat to slightly higher on Friday. But on a weekly basis, they fell for a third straight week, with U.S. crude’s West Texas Intermediate finishing again beneath the key $90 per barrel mark, while global benchmark Brent struggled vainly to recapture the $100 berth it lost on Aug. 31.

More interestingly was what was happening with the Russian president and his one-time stranglehold on energy prices.

There was a time when Putin’s mere hint of a squeeze in Russian energy exports would have made oil traders sit upright and sent crude prices flying.

Lately, however, some of Putin’s rhetoric seems to have lost its impact with the energy crowd. These included his threat to completely shut down all oil and gas flowing out of his country unless the G-7 halts its so-called “price cap” on Russian oil, and the EU dismantles sanctions built around the Nord Stream 2 pipeline.

Let’s be clear about something: the energy market, in general, is still super tight on supply. One major disruption is all it might take for prices to come screaming back.

Yet, oil prices haven’t really gotten too much higher from the seven-month lows they plumbed nearly two weeks ago. And that’s because of the overtime work the Federal Reserve has been doing in scaring the bejesus out of traders over inflation and interest rates. Oil bears have also had a helping hand from a lockdown-friendly China that seems Covid time-trapped in Marty McFly's fictional DeLorean, when the rest of the world has moved on with the pandemic for more than a year now.

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European gas prices are still sky-high, of course. And U.S. gas prices are aspiring for new 14-year highs each day in sympathy with what’s going on the other side of the Atlantic. This is in spite of a very-well informed constituency of the gas market patiently telling anyone who cares to listen that the US LNG output is capped at 13 billion cubic feet per day and there’s nothing more we can do about raising that right away — even if Europe goes to hell in a handbasket this winter, which, incidentally is what Putin wants (that it gets there in a frozen casket).

Anyway, much of the lofty projections for crude and gas prices in the fourth quarter of this year and the first quarter of 2023 are based on forecasts that the forthcoming winter will be brutal. No one knows for sure how that will turn out. If the opposite turns out to be true, I can only imagine how much money is going to be lost on the long side by those listening to the wonderful advice of Jeff Currie at Goldman Sachs.

But back to Putin. More interesting than the moves in oil was the public dressing-down the Russian leader got on Friday from one of his greatest allies — Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi. And, unfortunately for Putin, that came after Russian forces lost important and embarrassing territory in Ukraine over the past week.

Crude prices closed sharply off their highs on Friday — WTI ended just a penny up — on news that Iraq’s Basra oil terminal had resumed pumping following a brief disruption over an oil spill. The dollar's resurgence on expectations of a third straight bumper rate hike by the Fed this week also put paid to Friday’s early rally in crude. A jump in the U.S. oil rig count to 736 was another negative.

While these events dominated Friday’s headlines on oil, inconspicuously weighing on the market, however, was the image of a Putin rendered somewhat smaller by his key ally Modi, after the Indian premier refused to share Russia’s passion for the war in Ukraine.

"I know that today's era is not an era of war, and I have spoken to you on the phone about this," the Indian leader told Putin as they chatted on the sidelines of the Shanghai Cooperation Organisation summit, which the Russian president has tried to use as a showcase of his alliance with China and India.

How Modi and China’s leader Xi Jinping respond to Putin and the war in Ukraine is important to crude prices, particularly from the perspective of the price cap on Russian oil that the Group of Seven countries want to impose from December to limit what Moscow can earn from its energy exports to fund the war against Ukraine.

For the record, India dismisses the G7 oil price cap, saying energy security needs - and economics - will guide crude purchases by its refiners. But within that reaction was India’s tacit admission that the lower the price of Russian crude, the more the demand from Indian refiners will be. And that basically underscores the aim of the oil price cap, which is to reduce Russian revenues from oil. Crude-importing nations, led by China and the United States, also get to see lower prices for a barrel in the futures market when discounted Russian oil lands on the physical market, pressuring competing barrels from Saudi Arabia and other producers. Russia can, of course, export more barrels at reduced prices to make up for lost revenue, but that’s not what Putin nor the Saudis want.

China’s Xi also refrained from embracing Putin exuberantly this week over the war in Ukraine. That forced the Russian leader to publicly acknowledge “the well-balanced position of our Chinese friends in connection with the Ukrainian crisis.”

In a further concession, Putin said on Friday Russia will uphold its energy commitments if the West lifts its restrictions against the Russian Nord Stream 2 gas pipeline that runs across the bloc. Just a couple of weeks ago, Putin virtually held oil and gas exports ransom in Russia’s dealings with the West.

“It’s a fact: Putin’s scare talk on energy is getting less scary these days,” said John Kilduff, partner at New York energy hedge fund Again Capital. “And Russia’s key allies, India and China, showed this week they are more like fair-weather friends than one that would stand with Putin in the eye of the storm.”

Oil: Market Settlements and Activity

New York-traded West Texas Intermediate did a final trade of $85.40 per barrel after settling the official session just a cent higher at $85.11.

For the week, the U.S. crude benchmark was down almost 2%, adding to the near 7% loss over two prior weeks.

London-traded Brent did a final trade of $91.57, after settling the official session up 51 cents, or 0.6%, at $91.35 per barrel.

For the week, the global benchmark for oil fell 1.6%, adding to the near 9% slump over the two previous weeks.

Oil: Price Outlook

Technically is caught between a rock and a hard place, said Sunil Kumar Dixit, chief technical strategist at SKCharting.com.

“The price action setup is absolutely weak,” said Dixit. “As long as WTI sustains below $88.50, bears will continue to push for $82.50 and $81.20. If this zone fails as support, look for the 78.6% Fibonacci level of $77.”

He noted that through the last two weeks, the U.S. crude benchmark had failed to make a sustained break above $88.43 (61.8% Fibonacci retracement of $62.43 - $130.50) despite testing $90.37 and $90.17.

“Previous week's drop to $81.20 caused some bounce as prices approached the monthly middle Bollinger Band at $82.47, however, lack of buyers' confidence kept prices subdued,” Dixit said in his analysis. “Weekly stochastics at 9/8 continue to crawl below the 20-mark for the 7th straight week, while weekly RSI languishes in oversold territories.”

On the flip side, a sustained break above $88.50 can resume recovery towards the 50 Week Exponential Average of $92.08 and challenge the $96.50 (50% Fibonacci level) and $97.10, which represents the 200-Day Simple Moving Average.

Gold: Market Settlements and Activity

It’s amazing how much 24 hours could do to gold in the just-ended week, versus what 24 previous months did.

On Thursday, when neither the forex nor bond markets did enough to move the needle on gold prices, bears found it fit to hammer the yellow metal to the mid-$1,600 lows seen before the pandemic rally of 2020 that eventually resulted in all-time highs of above $2,100 for bullion.

In an ideal world, market moves sync perfectly with the news, data and other valuation matrix of an asset. In the real world, of course, there’s a greater chance for things to be overly exuberant or gloomy.

Thursday’s selloff in gold was beyond gloom. As a wave of risk-off sentiment built across commodities, longs in the yellow metal ostensibly became its biggest victims. One by one, the stop losses in gold got taken out like ninepins, as the market teetered on unfounded panic.

For what it’s worth, the benchmark gold futures contract on New York’s Comex, December, did a final trade of $1,684.50 after settling the official session up $6.20, or 0.4%, at $1,683.50. For the week, it fell 2.6% for its fourth week in the red out of five.

The spot price of bullion, which is more closely followed than futures by some traders, settled up $10.90, or 0.7%, at $1,675.42. For the week, spot gold lost 2.4%, also settling down for a fourth week in five.

And with another 72 hours to go before the Fed’s September decision on interest rates, there’s room for things to get a little more uncomfortable for gold bulls before they get better.

Gold: Price Outlook

Dixit of SKCharting said gold’s drop below $1,681 over the past week has shaken the confidence of market bulls as the plunge corresponds to a 38.2% Fibonacci retracement of long-term rally in bullion that went from $1,046 to $2,073.

“With this phenomenal drop that pushed the metal below the 200-week Simple Moving Average of $1,676 and the 50-month Exponential Moving Average of $1,670, there is a growing possibility of gold dropping further down to the next leg lower. We’re talking about the 50% Fibonacci level of $1560 over the Fed's rate hike spree that can add to the Dollar Index strength and Treasury yields.”

But, as per “old school”, gold is also likely to retrace upward towards the broken support-turned-resistance zone of $1,700-$1,710 before resuming the drop towards $1,560.

“Long story short, the metal has become extremely undervalued over the last six months as it accumulated a massive $420 loss,” Dixit noted.

While the weekly and monthly stochastics of 9/14 and 5/11 have reached oversold territories, daily stochastics have already made a positive overlap.

“Going into the week ahead, recovery may target $1,695 and $1,705 initially.

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Buyers may step in around $1,670-$1,665. A 75-bps Fed hike is not only baked into the cake; it’s already digested. If there’s a 100-bps for any reason, gold will melt faster than ice under 100 Fahrenheit. We could go to $1,618 in a blink.”

Disclaimer: Barani Krishnan does not hold positions in the commodities and securities he writes about.

Latest comments

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I can get your money for you. What is your bank account # ?
Help please I lost a lot of my my Mothers Saving Gude me Please that I can Recover Losted money back😥😥
M Sajeel Bhatti. It is always suggested that one should not invest money which one can not afford to lose. Invest according to your risk appetite. Practice risk management and money management and stick to strict descipline in trading.
Hi Please let me know about Gold Up or down?
M Sajeel Bhatti. Gold is technically down. However, if prices sustain above $1660, some recovery towards $1675-$1685 may come. Break below $1655 can resume correction towards $1640 and $1620
Even a war, interest rate hikes and tanking economies can’t raise the gold price, so it’s probably going much lower.
The USA will exhaust its strategic oil reserves just before the mid terms where the dems are almost certainly guaranteed to lose. After that inflation will come roaring back and oil prices will be north of 100.
The US will not even come close to exhausting the SPR. Get your facts straight and stop spreading disinformation.
ifa
Barani: Another insightful article full of useful information. Thanks! I have a minor quibble though: Marty McFly's car was the iconic Delorean, not a McLaren. ;)
Urrgh! I mixed up my auto reference here. LOL. I'll see if I can get the desk to fix. Thanks and bests, mate!
China’s Xi is the worst dictator, more so than Heitler.
biden is.
 No, Putin lover. That's not how it works.
Buy oil , tell , orcl , adobe , tqqq, sony
why
barani sir India is not a fair weather friend of Russia but inspite it's a friend in need is a friend indeed type of friendship.when western countries like USA and UK attacks any small countries for the sake of their own interest its proven to be justice but if any other nation does it, its means an invasion of sovereignty of that nation.
Abhay, John Kilduff is entitled to his opinion. And the optics of this week's political dance among India and China with Russia certainly seemed to suggest that, notwithstanding your historical anecdotes that I appreciate as perspective. And Russia, by the way, is NOT "small"; Ukraine is, relatively.
@abhay: Either way, you, as an autonomous person, must have your own moral positions. Is Russia's attack on Ukraine morally repugnant in its specifics or morally acceptable because of what other nations have done in the past? You
Abhay. You are right when you say India and Russia are not fair weather friends, rather the two nations share an all weather friendship. Thats true.
Another comment. This time on gold. Gold price has not changed measure in other currencies. Only going down on a high dollar as a result of the FED raising rates. All the big players know the FED cannot continue forever and will eventually pivot (Q4 2022 or Q1 2023). Even ABN Amro have changed their prediction of gold price for Q4 2022. So managed money will enter the precious metal game when the price is low enough. And if they do, Gold price will more up and never look back. So the endgame for gold is near. Mega chance ahead for Gold bulls. Make shore you don’t mis this opportunity because of weak gold price up till now.
Thanks for the perspective on gold, Martin.
Martin. Most of your observations stand right on merit. However, this is a situation where bears have succeeded in breaching a support that has held on for long.
Love the humour along side analysis. Good articles provoke commentary. Nice.
Thanks much, Havier. It's appreciative readers like you who keep me going. Bests and a great weekend.
FYI. An average oil stock shows about +40% investment return YTD. S&P500 is -19% for the same period. Which sector is a hedge against inflation/recession? The oil sector has a big fundamental advantage, chronic multi-year underinvestment in both new development projects and infrastructure, which has produced big supply-demand misbalance. This has nothing to do with Putin. The oil shortage has more serious reasons and it started way before Ukraine invasion.
 Did you receive this confirmation and proof from Vlad? Perhaps, not. You just politicize oil commentary, while neglecting actual factors moving oil price. Also, using large caps in messaging is considered impolite and hardly professional when used in a place supposed to be somewhat professional.
 Large caps were for emphasis. As you'd notice, I did not use them across the commentary. An analyst typically makes observations/commentary/opinions based on his/her perception of the events at hand. Would Harvard Business Review or the commentators at Yale write to Putin for "confirmation and proof" of his actions, before issuing an analysis that he's weaponing energy? I'm not putting Investing.com at par with these names but the relevance here is pretty clear.
 I guess, in your language, this is also "politicizing" oil commentary: "Let’s be clear about something: the energy market, in general, is still super tight on supply. One major disruption is all it might take for prices to come screaming back."
"I know that today's era is not an era of war, and I have spoken to you on the phone about this,"??? So, according to mister Modi, there will be an era of war? I am growingly thinking countries like Russia, China and India all have a hidden agenda and future plan to rage war and bloodshed. While the west is “hoping” for prolonged peace and stability, international law and order, these countries are looking forward to an era of war. And this are the countries we have been and are doing business with? I feel our leaders have been leading and are leading us in the wrong direction here. Or maybe I am misunderstanding Modi’s comment and someone can help me to clarify?
what you nato have done to afganistan, Syria, Venezuela, Iraq is not hidden from anyone.giving arms to terrorist organisation in the name of funding to pakistan is also an example of NATO countries
 Let me remind you that Afghanistan was harboring *****who committed an attack on the USA 9-11. I wonder how India, Russia or China will deal with such an attack on their country. Then Syria. You mean the country who killed its own civilians with chemical weapons? If Russia, China and India stood for something, they would have done something. But they don’t care. They only care about the trade deals they have with Assad, the war criminal. Then Venezuela, which was once a democratic country. After dictator Maduro took office, look how well the country progressed (sarcasm).
Martin. Your views about NATO are utterly biased. When you proclaim that NATO and the West are striving for prolonged peace, you conveniently ignore the fact that NATO used Ukraine as cannon fodder in fight against Russia.
Presenting oil price as a “referendum on Ukraine” is an obvious attempt to justify politicizing of the coverage, while moving it far away from practical investment angle. Hard to believe that it is the best approach for a site calling itself “investing”. Enough to say, the politicized oil commentary has been wrong on oil investment for long time, covering market stretch when oil investment outperformed other sectors by a mile or more.
Warm Camp, "politicized oil commentary"? Oil IS the most politicized commodity in the world!
Warm Camp, I guess you have a problem with this paragraph too then? "Yet, oil prices haven’t really gotten too much higher from the seven-month lows they plumbed nearly two weeks ago. And that’s because of the overtime work the Federal Reserve has been doing in scaring the bejesus out of traders over inflation and interest rates. Oil bears have also had a helping hand from a lockdown-friendly China that seems Covid time-trapped in Marty McFly's fictional McLaren, when the rest of the world has moved on with the pandemic for more than a year now."
Warm Camp. Oil has always been a critical element and catalyst when global politics is involved. Rather, Oil and global politics are inseparable. The political angle and investment angle are not independent of each other.
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