Crude Oil Steady After Biden Calls Gaza Ceasefire Permanent

  • US President Joe Biden calls the activated 60-day ceasefire deal as permanent. 
  • OPEC+ will delay its upcoming Output Policy Meeting to December 5th. 
  • The US Dollar Index bounces off support after traders took profit in their Greenback rally.  
  • Crude Oil trades rather steady this Thursday with selling pressure building after US President Joe  called the recent active ceasefire deal in Gaza as a permanent cessation of hostilities, Bloomberg reports. Meanwhile OPEC+ has confirmed it will postpone its upcoming Output Policy Meeting decision from Sunday to December 5th. The conglomerate of Oil Producing and Exporting Countries (OPEC) is again facing an existential crisis with a slowdown in global demand with more non-OPEC supply to be released to markets taking place.  (DXY), which measures the performance of the US Dollar (USD) against a basket of currencies, is bouncing off a technical support level. With US markets closed Thursday and Friday for Thanksgiving and Black Friday, the bounce comes from Europe where France is facing issues. The French Prime Minister Michel Barnier warned that France could become unstable if the French parliament does not pass a much needed budget plan, and could cause issues for France on financial markets, Bloomberg reported. At the time of writing, Crude Oil (WTI) trades at $68.97 and Brent Crude at $72.73
     Oil news and market movers: OPEC+ has no time

  • Delegates close to the matter confirmed in early Thursday trading that OPEC+ will delay its planned meeting for Sunday towards December 5th, Reuters and Bloomberg reported. OPEC’s secretariat said that the delay was because several ministers will attend the meeting of the Gulf Cooperation Council in Kuwait on Dec. 1.
  • China’s independent refiners have snapped up barrels from across the Middle East and Africa as offers of Iranian oil remain scarce and are more expensive due to broadening US sanctions, Bloomberg reports.
  • Israel has warned residents displaced by fighting and evacuation orders not to return to their homes in southern Lebanon, despite a ceasefire between Israeli forces and Hezbollah coming into effect Wednesday, CNN reports.
     
  • Oil Technical Analysis: A delay is not a solutionCrude Oil price still faces selling pressure with traders becoming impatient on what OPEC+ will do to make sure Crude OIl prices remain supported. With the slowdown in the Chinese economy, a global slowdown in Oil demand and the US set to  and dump many more barrels under President-elect Donald Trump, the rabbit that OPEC+ will need to grab out of its magic hat, must be an impressive one. Keep in mind that with plenty of stops placed just elbow $67.00, a quick correction to even $66.00 or $64.00 could be a possible scenario. On the upside, the pivotal level at $71.46 and the 100-day Simple Moving Average (SMA) at $72.26 are the two main resistances. The 200-day SMA at $76.27 is still far off, although it could be tested if tensions intensify further. In its rally towards that 200-day SMA, the pivotal level at $75.27 could still slow down any upticks. On the other side, traders need to look towards $67.12 – a level that held the price in May and June 2023 – to find the first support. In case that 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:Crude Oil Ticks Up Rumors Picking Up On OPEC+ Discussions US Dollar Chokeholds Markets After Trump Hits Neighboring Countries With Surprise Tariffs US Dollar Surges To Two-Year High As Eurozone PMIs Disappoint

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