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FX.co ★ Oil will stage a comeback

Oil will stage a comeback

Oil has taken OPEC+'s decision to extend its production cut by 2.2 million bpd until July for granted. The only surprise came from Russia's decision to reduce production and exports by 471,000 bpd in the second quarter. However, the damaged infrastructure from drone attacks makes it seem like this was a forced move. The organization wants to stabilize the oil market, leaving it with no real choice but to extend the agreement's terms.

The most significant burden falls on Saudi Arabia, producing 2 million bpd less than in November 2022. OPEC+ collectively produces 5.3 million bpd less, which accounts for 5% of global production, which will inevitably impact Brent. Since the beginning of the year, the North Sea crude has risen by 7%, partly due to non-OPEC producers not rushing to fill the void in the market, as they did in 2023. As a result, spreads between nearby contracts expand to 4-month highs, and the oil market becomes increasingly bullish.

Spread dynamics for Brent and WTI

Oil will stage a comeback

Support is driven by the belief that the global economy may grow faster than anticipated at the end of 2023. This will boost global demand, especially considering that China, the world's largest oil consumer, has set an ambitious GDP target of +5% for 2024. Achieving this goal would require additional fiscal and monetary incentives, theoretically creating a tailwind for Brent. However, Bloomberg experts believe the target is exagerrated, suggesting that the economy will expand at best by 4.6%.

The strong U.S. dollar is exerting pressure on the North Sea crude. Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell is expected to emphasize the need to maintain the federal funds rate at 5.5%, at least until the second half of 2024, in his Congressional testimony. This will not please Democrats who would prefer to avoid economic cooling due to high borrowing costs. However, the risks of inflation force the Fed to be cautious.

Oil volatility dynamics

Oil will stage a comeback

Oil will stage a comeback

Meanwhile, speculators, amid decreasing volatility, are shifting from the bear camp to the bull camp. By the week ending on February 27, they increased long positions in six major oil and oil product benchmarks by 10 million barrels in equivalent. In eight out of the last 11 five-day periods, fund managers have been acquiring oil. As a result, net longs increased to 532 million barrels.

Technically, on the daily chart, the bears managed to win back the internal bar, but the bullish bias persists. In conditions of falling volatility, it makes sense to bet on the uptrend and buy the North Sea grade on bounces from dynamic supports, such as moving averages and the pivot level at $81.55. Returning above the fair value at $82.9 and above the high of the internal bar at $84.05 should also be considered as a signal to form or increase long positions.

*The market analysis posted here is meant to increase your awareness, but not to give instructions to make a trade
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