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Oil News: Bearish Pressure Eases – Is a Short-Covering Rally on the Horizon?

By:
James Hyerczyk
Published: Mar 15, 2025, 01:40 GMT+00:00

Key Points:

  • IEA warns global oil supply will exceed demand by 600,000 barrels/day, adding downward pressure on crude oil prices.
  • WTI remains below the 50-day ($71.68) and 200-day ($70.36) moving averages, reinforcing a long-term bearish oil outlook.
  • Crude oil holds above $66.72, signaling a potential short-covering rally, but resistance at $68.22 and $70.35 could limit gains.
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In this article:

Can Crude Oil Maintain Its Minor Upside Bias?

Daily Light Crude Oil Futures

Light crude oil futures edged higher on Friday, consolidating within a well-defined trading range of $65.22 to $68.22. The market closed above the pivotal level of $66.72, signaling a slight upside bias despite the broader downtrend. A sustained move above this level could drive prices toward $68.22, with additional resistance at $69.18 and $70.35. However, failure to hold above $66.72 may invite sellers, potentially pushing prices back to the lower bound of $65.22.

On Friday, Light Crude Oil Futures settled at $67.18, up $0.63 or +0.95%.

Geopolitical Uncertainty Keeps Traders on Edge

Oil prices rebounded by 1% on Friday, closing the week nearly unchanged as traders weighed the uncertain prospects of a Ukraine ceasefire. Russian President Vladimir Putin indicated support for a U.S.-proposed ceasefire but raised conditions that delay any resolution. The prolonged war continues to keep Russian oil supplies under sanctions, adding to market volatility.

Former U.S. President Donald Trump reiterated calls for a ceasefire, highlighting the geopolitical risks that traders must navigate. Meanwhile, Chinese state firms are scaling back Russian oil imports due to sanctions risks, signaling potential supply disruptions in Asia’s largest crude market.

Supply and Demand Fundamentals Remain Bearish

Despite short-term upside movements, the long-term and intermediate trends remain bearish, with WTI trading below both the 50-day moving average ($71.68) and the 200-day moving average ($70.36). This technical positioning suggests that the market has not yet broken out of its downtrend.

Adding to the bearish case, the International Energy Agency (IEA) warned that global oil supply is expected to outpace demand by 600,000 barrels per day this year, largely due to increasing U.S. production and weaker-than-expected demand growth. Additionally, OPEC+ supply levels remain steady, reducing the likelihood of a supply-driven price surge.

Will Oil Prices Sustain a Recovery?

With macroeconomic uncertainty and rising U.S. supply, traders should remain cautious about expecting a prolonged price recovery. While geopolitical risks may drive short-term price spikes, weak demand fundamentals and increasing oil output weigh on the market’s long-term direction.

For now, crude oil has found a value zone that could trigger short-covering, but a true reversal requires a sustained break above key resistance levels. The market outlook remains neutral to bearish, with downside risks outweighing bullish momentum unless supply disruptions materialize.

More Information in our Economic Calendar.

About the Author

James HyerczykProfits & Punchlines

Mr.Hyerczyk is a technical analyst, market researcher, educator and trader. Jim is an expert in the area of patterns, price and time analysis, Forex and stocks.

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