WTI punched through the October 20 main bottom at $55.91 early in the session, a level that had quietly held together the downside for months. That break puts the May 30 main bottom at $55.22 squarely in play. If that floor gives way, the chart opens up toward the $50.31–$49.49 downside target zone.
There’s no meaningful short-term resistance overhead, which tells you sellers aren’t meeting much pushback yet. The broader downtrend remains capped by the 50-day moving average at $59.20, with the 200-day moving average higher up at $60.77. Until price can reclaim either, rallies look more like selling opportunities than a change in tone, even if the pace of the decline cools.
Peace Talk Optimism Adds to Oversupply Anxiety
Fundamentals aren’t helping. Oil slipped below $60 after reports of progress in Russia-Ukraine peace talks revived expectations that Russian barrels could re-enter the market. The U.S. offering NATO-style security guarantees to Kyiv and European negotiators flagging progress was enough to get traders leaning harder into the oversupply narrative.
Russia pushed back on the idea of territorial concessions, which keeps the talks messy, but the market is trading the headline risk — not the fine print. As one analyst put it, the idea of additional Russian supply hitting an already well-stocked market is tough to ignore, even if timing remains unclear.
China Data Reinforces Demand Doubts
On the demand side, China is flashing warning signs again. Factory output growth slowed to a 15-month low, while retail sales posted their weakest pace since late 2022. That data reinforced the view that global demand may struggle to absorb current supply growth.
There was a modest counterbalance from the U.S. seizure of a Venezuelan-linked oil tanker, but traders largely shrugged it off. Floating storage remains elevated, and a recent surge in Chinese buying from Venezuela suggests supply is still finding a home, just not at prices bulls would like.
