West Texas Intermediate (WTI) recovers some ground in the mid-north American session and climbs more than 1.30% after bouncing from a daily low of $80.71. Saudi Arabia and Russia’s commitment to its 1.2 million barrel cut until the end of the year sponsored Oil’s recovery.
According to UBS analysts, cuts implemented by the Saudis and Russia could be extended into the 2024 first quarter due to “seasonally weaker oil demand at the start of every year.” Meanwhile, recent releases of worldwide manufacturing PMIs paint a slowing economic slowdown that could cap oil prices as demand diminishes.
Following weaker-than-expected business activity indicators in China, on Tuesday, Caixin will reveal factory conditions in the country. Analysts expect a 3.3% drop in exports in October, as announced in a Reuters poll, from a decline in September.
Meanwhile, the Middle East conflict looms as a possible cause that could underpin WTI prices higher. Although the conflict remains capped to Gaza’s Strip, risks of broadening around the region are high. Hence, Oil traders need to be focused on geopolitical developments besides the Israe-Hamas conflict.
From a technical perspective, WTI's retracement toward the $80.00 mark is just a pullback, sponsored after Oil’s fastest rise from around $77.64 toward the $94.99 mark, though falling shy of $100.00. To resume its uptrend, buyers must reclaim the 20-day moving average (DMA) at $84.69, which could open the door to challenge the 50-DMA at $86.58 before aiming toward the $90.00 psychological level. Conversely, with a drop below $80.00, sellers can challenge the 200-DMA at $78.16.
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