Chart Of The Day: How To Play Oil's Current Correction

 | Jun 20, 2022 13:30

WTI crude oil has been falling, for the second straight day in a row, for six of the last eight sessions.

On Friday alone, the energy commodity plunged nearly 7%—its biggest drop since April—part of the fallout after the US Federal Reserve's sharpest rate increase in 28 years. The more expensive dollar means that oil could become too costly given that it's priced in USD. Thus, the market quickly repriced the commodity according to the updated value of its underlying currency.

Aside from the influence the current US monetary policy has on the oil market, WTI is in a long-term uptrend. Indeed, that's expected to continue as long as supply concerns keep steering prices—a situation that will likely endure while Russia's war in Ukraine persists. Supply disruptions out of Libya could also trigger an additional up-leg.

But weekly technicals aren't reflecting fundamentals.