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How Low Can Oil Prices Go?

Published 08/10/2015, 06:21 AM
Updated 07/09/2023, 06:31 AM

Oil Daily Chart

When considering the chart for crude oil, there is really only one question to answer and it is simply this – how low can it go?

To answer that particular question, we need to consider the charts across a variety of time-frames. If we start with the daily chart, the self evidence of the bearish picture speaks for itself, with the VPOC (volume point of control) remaining firmly in the $59.80 per barrel region, with the transacted volumes at this level confirming the sustained pressure that has been driving oil prices ever lower.

Since early June we have seen oil's price find some support on the high volume node at $52.50 per barrel, before continuing to move lower once again, through the low volume node at $50 and down to the next high volume node at $48 per barrel, where prices paused once again. Finally, towards the end of July, the price of oil broke below this node to approach the low volume node now waiting in the $44.00 per barrel region, with the market closing just below at $43.70 per barrel.

Given this is a low volume node, we can expect to see this breached easily, with little transacted volume to provide a platform of potential support. Moving to consider the volume price relationship, volumes throughout July and August have been average, and certainly do not suggest any degree of buying at this level on the daily chart.

Oil Weekly Chart

The weekly chart tells a similar story, with the fulcrum of the VPOC now sitting well above the current price action, just below the $60 per barrel area. With last week’s price action having taken out the low of March at $47.09, this has added yet further bearish sentiment to an already waterlogged commodity.

Here too on the VPOC we are approaching a low volume node and can therefore expect this to be taken out with little effort. In addition, the volume/price relationship is confirming the bearish picture of the last three weeks, with rising volumes and a falling market, again signalling the lack of any significant buying at present.

Oil Monthly Chart

Finally, to the monthly chart. Once again we have breached the high volume node on the VPOC indicator in the $57.29 per barrel region and are now testing the low volume node at $44.50 in this timescale. Last month’s increase in volume confirmed the wide spread down candle, which saw oil prices fall over $10 per barrel in the month.

For the time being, the price war continues unabated, with the battle lines drawn: OPEC on one side and the alternative suppliers on the other. Only time will tell who will blink first, and even the weekly oil inventories seem to have been relegated to the ‘also rans’ of the news, with last week’s big draw in inventories failing to spark any kind of meaningful rally.

The gyrations of the US dollar also seem to be passing largely unnoticed, with the longer term price war now dominating oil prices. In the short term, we are likely to see oil continue lower and down to test the $40.85 per barrel level in due course, with any move through this area then opening the prospect of a move towards the $36.47 per barrel level last seen in 2003.

From a fundamental perspective what is interesting to note is that of all the oil producers only Norway is equipped to withstand oil prices at $40 per barrel and balance its 2015 budget. By comparison, Venezuela needs oil to be at least $160 per barrel, but with the December 2020 contract currently priced at $62.05 OPEC’s gamble is looking increasingly misguided.

Finally, what I find perplexing whenever these current trends develop and prices fall so dramatically—nobody thanks the speculators, but when prices rise we are everybody’s whipping horse!

Latest comments

To non-OPEC producers: I sincerely hope US will cut rigs and oil production at this critical moment, allow oil a chance to hold on now and rebound. Otherwise for a little short-term gain US producers are helping OPEC ******themselves. I doubt they can survive at $20/$30 oil, which OPEC is making it happen. I also hope that non-OPEC countries can form an ally like OPEC to fight together. Each member of this new organization can contribute money to an oil fund, which can be used to protect oil price, like now. Then OPEC can't manipulate oil price as easily as they want and non-OPEC producers/countries can survive better. They might also consider to buy each other's oil instead of OPEC's, so OPEC will have to cut production. Good luck.
To OPEC: . "Economic stress leads to war. It leads to tension. It leads to civil strife, international strife." . I know OPEC doesn't care about the huge losses and sufferings they've caused to millions of people and the world economy. But I hope they do care about law of karma and the sufferings they'll have to endure from their own maliciously intentioned acts.Yes US shale boom did cause oil imbalance, but they didn't do it to *****OPEC, and they did cut large amounts of rigs and production to reduce the imbalance.. . To suffered oil bulls: . Water coning of OPEC wells after too fast too much production will force production down.Things have reached extreme & will bounce back.
OPEC/SA has been purposefully flooding the market with far too much excess oil, and then profits from it by shorting oil and squeezes US competitors out of market [see "OPEC Shorts Are Driving Down the Price of Oil" http://oilandenergyinvestor.com/2015/07/opec-shorts-are-driving-down-the-price-of-oil]. . . On 08/13/2015 WTI was sold huge into 30s from 42s. This only happened to WTI, not brent. And the spread between WTI and brent has been made to well over $7. The logical guess would be that OPEC has been specifically selling WTI to ***US shale.
More expensive shale oil producers will blink first, unless the unrest in the middle east escalates significantly disrupting oil production. Patience is needed, but oil will hit $80 again, a peak of $100 is also possible. Extremes like $140 might be a thing of the past.
Nobody will blink. The price of oil was, is a bubble. The inflation-adjusted price is $41.70/bbl. To say oil should be at $80 or $100 is asinine.. . Make no mistake, shale producers are going through the same exact thing gold producers had over the last few years.. . The realization that sound balances do matter.
"Only time will tell who will blink first" I'm of the belief that only the lowest cost producers will be able to survive in this environment so it is not a matter of who blinks first but whoever has the lowest costs. Many projects are being temporarily or permanently put on hold as producers are struggling to cut costs.
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