Oil prices are off 25 percent from their four-year highs reached in early October, after the massive sell-off that began later that month which dragged crude oil squarely into bear market territory in November, completely wiping out this year's gains.
On Tuesday, prices continued to fall sharply, with WTI reaching $53.34 by at 4.55pm EST, and Brent crude falling 6.65% on the day to $62.35. Both benchmarks are now trading at multi-month lows due to high crude stockpiles and disappointing results from the sanctions against Iran that most suspected would result in a tightening of supply.
The price slide that began early last week saw oil prices record their steepest one-day plunge in three years. Prices recovered somewhat in the latter half of last week, only to spiral downward again this week as concerns about oversupply persist.
Despite today's sharp downward trend, some analysts think that prices are set to regain ground over the next month, based on the trends from past such oil price slumps. Others think that oil prices will need a major catalyst to rebound from current levels. This major catalyst could be the OPEC/non-OPEC meeting on December 6-7, at which the cartel and allies may announce a fresh production cut to stop the price decline, stabilize markets, and erase fears of looming oversupply threatening to sink prices again.
If history repeats itself, oil prices and the S&P 500 are both set to rebound in the month following the plunge, according to investment bank Jefferies.
"Severe one month declines in the price of oil has not presaged market weakness, quite the contrary, actually," Jefferies said in a research note, as carried by CNBC.
Jefferies analyzed how oil prices and the S&P 500 index have reacted after a plunge in the price of oil similar to the one of the past few weeks and after oil slipped below two standard deviations thresholds. The investment bank found that since 1990-excluding the abnormal market behavior during the global financial crisis-WTI Crude typically gains 5.5 percent over the following month and rises 7.3 percent in the following three months after a plunge. Related: The Impending Endgame In Oil Markets
The S&P 500, for its part, generally goes up 2.3 percent over a month and gains 5.4 percent in the three months following a similar slump, according to Jefferies.
In the week ending November 13, hedge fund managers cut their net long position-the difference between bullish and bearish bets-in WTI Crude to the lowest since August 2017 and cut their net long position in Brent Crude to the lowest in a year and a half, according to data from exchanges and the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) compiled by Bloomberg.
The number of long positions in Brent Crude slumped to their lowest in nearly three years in the week to November 13, but the long positions in WTI Crude slightly edged up by less than 1 percent, snapping a six-week-long streak of weekly drops in longs. The number of short positions in WTI jumped by 12 percent. Yet, the slight increase in WTI longs last week could be a sign that some fund managers may resume going long, according to some market strategists who spoke to Bloomberg.
"Perhaps what we ended up getting was traders that looked at this and said, 'Ok, you're down 20 percent, maybe I should start throwing some longs on there,'" Bill O'Grady, chief market strategist at Confluence Investment Management, told Bloomberg.
Historical trends do suggest that oil prices may rebound over the month after the slump. The month after this price plunge features OPEC and allies' official meeting, at which the partners are expected to discuss and possibly approve a new oil production cut. With signs of economic and oil demand growth slowing, the market may be expecting an announcement of a sizeable output reduction in early December, and could be bitterly disappointed should OPEC fail to live up to this expectation.
By Tsvetana Paraskova for Oilprice.com
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Tsvetana is a writer for Oilprice.com with over a decade of experience writing for news outlets such as iNVEZZ and SeeNews. More
Comments
So very nice. Betting, and waging on profit& gained by anothers pain and ruin. After all,, those KINDA people, "the ones over there, why there kids don't even look like ours, they dress different, eat different, play different. Why they even live different then us NORMAL people over here. Why I bet they don't even wash before dinner. So we should punish them and there generations to come. Cause,,, hmmm, well, cause God loves me more and wants me to prosper and punish all thee EVIL DOERS I feel need punished. So when I make a profit,, I can donate a little to those who wanna be like me! Not too much or I risk spoiling them and punishing myself. Take a good look in the mirror, see that person,, thats the child across the ocean,, on the sidewalk in L.A., next door, crossing the boarders. The child of God that morphed into this person, that's You, thats me,,, thats us. Scripture warns us; what you do unto mine,, you do unto me. I take that to mean; we are all reflected in the persona of what we choose to see. Or more simply and perfectly stated; you reap what you sow. HAPPY THANKSGIVING CHILDREN!
Laying siege and waste to others, leaving orphaned children by the millions in poverty and saddness, to grow into whatever they become,, if, they make it. I wonder,, who, as we call ourselves, "Greatest Nation" are we,, ? Maybe we should ask thee un-intimidated for the truth