Crude Oil price sprints higher on Monday on the back of an OPEC statement in which the Oil cartel says it has agreed to delay its foreseen production restart until at least December. Previously, the group was set to add 180,000 barrels a day from October but after the announcement, this won’t happen before the end of December, limiting supply excesses for the last few months of 2024. (DXY), which tracks the performance of the Greenback against six other currencies, is dipping on Monday. The main driver is the US presidential election after polls from ABC News/Ipsos showed Vice President Kamala Harris leading by a 49%-46% gap nationally while The New York Times/Siena survey showed Harris ahead in five of the seven swing states.At the time of writing, Crude Oil (WTI) trades at $71.15 and Brent Crude at $74.86.
Oil news and market movers: Finally some sense
Oil Technical Analysis: This could get messyCrude Oil prices are rallying after OPEC+ has published a brief statement on its website on Sunday saying that it will delay its Oil output increase again by a month. Although that might look like a sound thing to do, it still remains a drop on a hot plate. Whether it will be enough to bring back markets in a well-balanced position between supply and demand remains to be seen. On the upside, the 55-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) at $70.92 remains the first level to reclaim and needs to see a daily close. Next up, the hefty technical level at $74.45, with the 100-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) and a few pivotal lines, is possibly the next big hurdle ahead. The 200-day SMA at $76.88 is still quite far off, although it could get tested in case tensions in the Middle East pick up again. On the downside, traders need to look much lower at $67.12, a level that supported the price in May and June 2023. In case that level breaks, the 2024 year-to-date low emerges at $64.75 followed by $64.38, the low from 2023.(Click on image to enlarge)US WTI Crude Oil: Daily ChartMore By This Author:US Dollar Trades Flat This Friday Ahead Of Durable Goods Data US Dollar Gains Further Fueled By Surge In US Yields, Election Uncertainty US Dollar Supported While Markets Cool Down Fed’s Rate Cut Expectations