Chart Of The Day: Here's Why Oil Is Still Heading To $60

 | Jun 19, 2018 15:01

The debate regarding which way oil is headed next rages on. The commodity's fundamentals right now are murky.

Oil could fall if OPEC's production cap is reversed later this week in Vienna and additional supply floods markets. On the other hand, it could resume its uptrend above $70 if global economic growth should strengthen or US economic sanctions against Iran and ongoing turmoil in Venezuela diminish supply.

Goldman Sachs analysts expect prices to rise to $80. They base this on an outlook for declining inventories per the global supply-demand balance, OPEC notwithstanding.

However, the Wall Street Journal yesterday published an article whose headline declared: “Ignore the OPEC Drama, More Oil Is Coming .” The piece points out the following critical point:

“…investors who are bidding up prices in the expectation of a split are misunderstanding both the history of the cartel and the current state of the oil market."

OPEC’s nonmember Russia is currently siding with Saudi Arabia about boosting output by a reported 300,000 to 600,000 barrels a day.

Yesterday’s price jump was based solely on trader expectations that the dissenters would prevail, limiting the increase.

The Journal believes prices will rise no matter what based on game theory and history. Saudi Arabia and Russia produce five times what Iran or Iraq can and 15 times Venezuela’s output, since its oil industry is in chaos. in short, no one is in a position to stop Saudi Arabia and Russia.

However, technical analysis tells us the supply-demand balance suggests prices will continue lower.