August WTI crude oil traded higher during the week ending July 10, with prices last at $71.84 through Thursday evening, up $3.38, or 4.94%. The contract posted a wide weekly range, climbing from a low of $67.82 to a high of $76.08 before pulling back late Thursday.
The week’s advance was driven by one dominant theme: growing concern over global oil supplies. Traders added a larger risk premium to crude prices as renewed geopolitical tensions in the Middle East raised questions about the security of oil shipments through the Strait of Hormuz. Those concerns outweighed bearish pressure from another OPEC+ production increase and an unexpected build in U.S. crude inventories.
Although prices retreated from their weekly highs, the market is in a position to finish the week with a solid gain as traders continue to place greater weight on potential supply disruptions than on additional production reaching the market.
Middle East Supply Fears Fuel Strong Weekly Rally
The market began the week under pressure after OPEC+ agreed to increase August production targets, continuing its effort to return previously withheld barrels to the market. Normally, additional supply would weigh on prices.
Instead, traders quickly shifted their attention to rising geopolitical risks. Reports of increased tensions involving Iran and concerns over commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz prompted buyers to return to the market. Since roughly one-fifth of the world’s…
August WTI crude oil traded higher during the week ending July 10, with prices last at $71.84 through Thursday evening, up $3.38, or 4.94%. The contract posted a wide weekly range, climbing from a low of $67.82 to a high of $76.08 before pulling back late Thursday.
The week’s advance was driven by one dominant theme: growing concern over global oil supplies. Traders added a larger risk premium to crude prices as renewed geopolitical tensions in the Middle East raised questions about the security of oil shipments through the Strait of Hormuz. Those concerns outweighed bearish pressure from another OPEC+ production increase and an unexpected build in U.S. crude inventories.
Although prices retreated from their weekly highs, the market is in a position to finish the week with a solid gain as traders continue to place greater weight on potential supply disruptions than on additional production reaching the market.
Middle East Supply Fears Fuel Strong Weekly Rally
The market began the week under pressure after OPEC+ agreed to increase August production targets, continuing its effort to return previously withheld barrels to the market. Normally, additional supply would weigh on prices.
Instead, traders quickly shifted their attention to rising geopolitical risks. Reports of increased tensions involving Iran and concerns over commercial shipping through the Strait of Hormuz prompted buyers to return to the market. Since roughly one-fifth of the world’s seaborne crude oil passes through the waterway, even the possibility of disruptions was enough to lift prices sharply.
As concerns over supply security grew, WTI rallied more than $8 from its weekly low before profit-taking emerged late Thursday.
OPEC+ Output Increase Takes a Back Seat to Geopolitical Risk
While OPEC+ continued to move forward with higher production targets, traders questioned whether those additional barrels would be enough to offset the risk of supply interruptions elsewhere.
The market viewed the production increase as a longer-term development, while geopolitical events represented an immediate threat to available supplies. As a result, concerns over exports from the Middle East became a much stronger driver of prices than planned output increases.
The week’s price action demonstrated that oil markets continue to react more aggressively to threats against existing supplies than to announcements of future production growth.
U.S. Inventory Report Delivers Mixed Fundamental Signals
The latest U.S. government inventory report offered mixed signals for the market. Crude oil inventories unexpectedly increased as domestic production remained strong and imports exceeded exports.
However, the report also showed declines in gasoline and distillate fuel inventories, suggesting that refinery demand remained healthy and fuel consumption continued to support the market during the summer driving season.
The conflicting data encouraged some profit-taking after crude reached its weekly high but failed to erase the week’s gains. Traders appeared more focused on tightening supplies of refined products than on the increase in crude stockpiles.
Economic Uncertainty Limits Late-Week Buying
While supply concerns remained supportive, broader economic issues prevented prices from extending their rally.
Investors continued to monitor inflation, interest rate expectations, and global economic growth for clues about future oil demand. Those concerns encouraged some traders to lock in profits after crude posted its strongest rally in weeks.
The combination of stronger crude inventories and lingering uncertainty over the global economy helped pull WTI back from its weekly peak, though prices remained well above where they started the week.
Weekly Light Crude Oil Futures
Trend Indicator Analysis
Long-term technical analysis of the August WTI crude oil futures market comes down to one factor, the 52-week moving average at $68.62. Hold above the 52-week MA and there is an outside chance of a strong counter-trend rally. A failure to hold this indicator puts the December bottom at $55.40 on the radar.
This week, the market tested the 52-MA before a short-covering rally drove prices to $76.08. Following a prolonged correction in terms of price and time, a short-covering rally is expected. The move is designed to shake out the weakest short-sellers. The pullback from the first high is where the key activity is expected to take place next week. Given the short-term rally of $67.04 to $76.08, the tone of the market next week is likely to be determined by trader reaction to its pivot at $71.56.
Weekly Technical Forecast
The direction of the Weekly August Crude Oil futures contract for the week ending July 17 is likely to be determined by trader reaction to the short-term pivot at $71.56. Short-term traders will be positioning off this level; longer-term traders will be watching the 52-week MA at $68.62.
Bullish Scenario
A sustained move above $71.56 will signal the presence of buyers. This could trigger a counter-trend rally into $72.48 to $77.75. Overcome the top level with conviction, and $83.57 to $87.47 becomes the next major target zone.
Bearish Scenario
A sustained move under $71.56 will indicate the presence of sellers. This will be the earliest sign that the short-covering rally is over and that the downtrend is ready to resume. If sellers come in heavy and aggressively hit bids, then look for another test of the 52-week MA at $68.62. A failure here and we’re ready for a retest of the swing low at $67.04. Not only is this price potential support, but also the trigger point for an acceleration to the downside.
Fundamental Outlook Favors Higher Prices if Supply Risks Persist
The fundamental outlook remains cautiously bullish heading into next week.
The market has shown that geopolitical supply concerns currently carry more weight than rising OPEC+ production or a temporary increase in U.S. crude inventories. As long as uncertainty surrounds oil shipments through the Middle East, traders are likely to maintain a risk premium in crude prices.
Next week’s direction will largely depend on whether geopolitical tensions ease or intensify. If concerns over global oil supplies begin to fade, additional OPEC+ production and ample U.S. output could pressure prices lower. However, if supply risks remain elevated, buyers are likely to continue supporting the market despite lingering concerns about the global economy.
This week, the short-term focus for traders is the minor pivot at $71.56. Longer-term traders should continue to react to the price action and order flow around the 52-week moving average at $68.62.
A group of crypto and Web3 firms that includes OKX, MetaMask, Matter Labs and Genlayer have formed the “Internet Court” to reach dispute resolutions between...