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Unexpected Crude Inventory Build Weighs on Oil

In The Short Term Look To Oil Consumers, Not Producers, For Profits

Over the last month or two, I have, on multiple occasions, expressed the view that the failure of WTI to establish itself above the $60-$62 level does not bode well for prices over the next few months. The longer that situation is maintained and the more failed attempts to break through there are, the more concerned I become. That poses a problem of sorts for somebody whose life is spent looking for trade and investment opportunities in the energy sector.

Shorting a whole bunch of energy related stocks because of that view would be one approach, but that is simply not practical for many people who have long only investment accounts rather than trading accounts. Even those who could short stock in oil related companies, however, would be taking too much risk doing so at these levels, with very limited potential rewards. That is amply demonstrated by one example. When crude oil futures hit their lows in the middle of March, Exxon Mobil (XOM) bottomed out just below $83. As I write, it is trading just above $84. Now obviously the panic selling as oil fell out of bed was overdone, but logically it makes no sense shorting the stock now to profit from a possible oil price drop, with WTI trading around 25 percent higher than at that time. It is quite possible that oil could drop back to the lows and stocks like XOM barely move.

My trading background, however, makes me averse to holding a lot of cash. If oil stays below the resistance level and even falls further I want to…

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Martin Tillier

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