From a technical perspective, WTI crude is trading below the 200-day moving average ($63.06), the 50-day moving average ($63.56), and a long-term pivot at $64.21. This alignment underscores the bearish tone in the market. Prices have already broken below key swing bottoms at $61.61 and $61.34, exposing the September 5 low at $61.10 and the August 13 bottom at $60.77.
A confirmed break under $60.77 could trigger an acceleration toward the late May bottom at $55.74. That level would likely act as a major downside target for traders managing risk or building short-side exposure.
Geopolitical Tensions Offer Limited Support
While geopolitical risks are rising, they have yet to materially impact supply. The U.S. is now supporting Ukraine with intelligence for long-range missile strikes on Russian energy infrastructure, according to U.S. officials. This could eventually lead to disruptions in Russian crude flows, but analysts like UBS’s Giovanni Staunovo caution that absent real-time supply impacts, price support will be limited.
The Group of Seven’s latest vow to tighten restrictions on Russian oil purchases adds to the geopolitical backdrop, but traders remain focused on near-term fundamentals—namely, supply-demand balances and inventories.