Light crude oil futures are grinding higher Monday, with traders eyeing a potential breakout above the 200-day moving average at $66.48. A sustained push through this resistance could open the door for a retest of the April 2 high at $71.17. On the downside, technical support is firm near $62.59, with the 50-day moving average providing additional backing at $61.90.
At 11:54 GMT, Light Crude Oil Futures are trading $64.91, up $0.33 or +0.51%.
Oil prices are holding steady ahead of Monday’s high-level U.S.-China trade talks in London. The optimism surrounding a potential deal is helping to counterbalance concerns over a July production increase from the OPEC+ alliance.
The group confirmed it would move forward with its previously announced 411,000 barrels per day hike, rejecting calls from Saudi Arabia for a more aggressive output push. HSBC noted that the market appears balanced going into the summer months, with demand expected to peak in July-August, matching the incremental supply from OPEC+.
Friday’s U.S. jobs data also provided support to oil, with traders viewing the report as a “Goldilocks” print—strong enough to indicate stability but soft enough to raise expectations for a Federal Reserve rate cut.
The unemployment rate held at 4.2%, while job growth slowed modestly to 139,000. Lower rates could stimulate broader economic activity and, by extension, energy demand. West Texas Intermediate (WTI) posted a 4.9% weekly gain, while Brent added 2.75%, snapping a two-week losing streak.
Despite disappointing Chinese economic indicators—including falling exports and deepening factory gate deflation—markets remain focused on potential trade progress.
Crude oil imports in China fell to a four-month low in May as refiners initiated planned maintenance. Yet investors appear to be prioritizing signs of renewed diplomacy between the U.S. and China, after Presidents Trump and Xi spoke last Thursday in a call described as “very positive” by the White House.
With trade sentiment improving and OPEC+ output increases already priced in, the short-term outlook for crude appears bullish. If WTI breaks above the 200-day moving average at $66.48, the door could open for a rally toward $71.17.
However, any disappointment from trade talks or unexpected macroeconomic weakness—particularly from China—could drag prices back toward key support near $62.50. For now, price action suggests buyers remain in control, leaning toward a bullish near-term oil prices forecast.
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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.