■ WTI chipped lower as shipping continued through Red Sea despite new rebel attacks.
■ Crude bids are eating away at last week’s gains as shipping lanes remain open.
West Texas Intermediate (WTI) Crude Oil is easing back on Wednesday after last week’s 2%-plus gain on the back of transportation cancellations through the Red Sea following attacks on cargo ships by Iran-backed Houthi rebels in Yemen.
Houthi rebels have vowed to keep up the pace of attacks in the region, with Tuesday seeing an uptick in ship attacks, but logistics companies that previously suspended shipping lanes through the Yemen region of the Red Sea have returned to the area despite fresh attacks, sailing behind a joint task force that has settling into the region in an effort to quell rebel activity.
With Crude Oil production continuing to outpace declining barrel demand, even in the face of steepening production cuts from member states of the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), and it’s organization of allies the OPEC+, Crude Oil continues to see stiff bearish pressure.
WTI Technical Outlook
Near-term momentum continues to vex WTI, leeping prices pinned close to the 50-hour Simple Moving Average (SMA) as near-term bullish plays regularly run out of steam. US Crude Oil continues to trade on the north side of the 200-hour SMA, but the gap is closing quickly with the 200-day SMA rising into $73.50.
Oil bidders will be looking to gather enough steam to crach through the 200-day SMA currently floating near the $78.00 handle, while short sellers will note that WTI is approaching a technical confluence zone between familiar price peaks and a fresh bearish cross of the 50-day and 200-day SMAs just above $77.00.