Chart of the Day: Why WTI Will Fall Despite New Cuts Hopes

 | Nov 29, 2018 13:51

WTI Crude dropped 2.43% Wednesday and 3.46% from the day's high after U.S. stockpiles climbed for the 10th-straight week and Saudi Arabia said it will not curb output unless other oil-producing countries also rein in their supply levels. Russia's President Vladimir Putin later added fuel to the fire by indicating that he’s comfortable with current prices. Still, yesterday’s price closed at $50.29, above the key psychological $50 level, with the day's low also holding above that critical mark at $50.06.

This morning, WTI prices temporarily yielded to downward pressure and slipped below the $50 support for the first time since October 2017, as demand retreated on concerns that OPEC would fail to significantly reduce output. But prices later bounced back on signals from Russia that it was leaning toward an output cut.