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Back
on July 25th of this year, I wrote a piece for the Market
WrapUp updated July 25th (see
archives) wherein I talked about a stock market bottom (in a series
of articles) and a potential top in Crude Oil. In that article, I noted
that on a longer-term trend basis, the new series of higher highs in
Crude Oil, were showing many signs of failing momentum. Momentum
measures the force underpinning any advance in price and when prices are
advancing against the backdrop of declining momentum, it is usually only
a matter of time before they roll over in slide in a large correction.
In the
case of Crude Oil, I showed the chart below with the Weekly Oil chart
and the Weekly RSI. RSI is a normalized momentum indicator, meaning it
measures the degree of momentum within a market and attempts to reflect
the underlying forces on a fixed or normalized scale. This is a
different approach then say, Moving Average Convergence-Divergence
(MACD), another popular momentum indicator, which uses a non-bounded
scale and can be equally effective. Back on July 25th, the
technical picture of Crude Oil showed a classic 5 wave advancing pattern
coming to a peak with the 5th wave, showing hallmark signs of
steadily weakening figures on the RSI.

As it
turned out, those negative momentum divergences continued to play out
and in another report issued on Wednesday September 13th with
Crude Oil at $68 per barrel, I pointed out a double top in Crude Oil
noting, that Crude Oil was “in close proximity to key support near the
$68.40 level (see next chart)”. At the time, I stated, “...the
potential that a downside break below $68.40 could quickly lead to a
bout of serious follow thru downside action, with Oil’s next major
support being in the high $50’s."

Ultimately,
I “sketched in” and set a downside target on a breakdown of $57
dollars for Crude, which on the nearby chart appeared to be a strong,
longer range support. More recently, in my October 3rd
newsletter update, I included yet another chart of Crude Oil, this time
an hourly chart telling readers that Crude still had a bit further to go
– near term, on the downside.
Using
Elliott Wave analysis, (not shown on chart), I produced the following
graph with Crude Oil at $58.80 at the time. In the report, I explained
that Oil (1) need to rally toward $62 and then needed a second and final
decline to a lower low near the $57.50 to $58 range, which at that point
should mark the final low of the larger decline (see next chart).
Updating that chart to the present time period, we find that the
anticipated “bottoming sequence” for Crude Oil has taken shape right
along the proper outline, with prices having rallied to a high of $61.49
on October 9th, followed by a decline to a low yesterday at
$57.30.
While
I still cannot rule out prices lingering in this area for another day or
two, the overall appearance of the Oil chart is now that of a major
bottom, with the initial recovery off the low, very likely to lift
prices back up into the $64 to $66 dollar range over the next few weeks.

Above:
the Hourly Chart forecast for Crude Oil on October 3rd with
projected rally to $62 and then decline to $58, and
Below:
the actual outcome which followed the estimate on both price and time

Ironically,
listening to cheerleaders on “BubbleVision” and the plethora of one-sided,
“Energy Analysts” appearing thereon, the sentiment toward Crude Oil
is now universally bearish with commentator after commentator
forecasting $50, $45, or even $35 Oil over the next few months.
While
it is true that Oil inventories are presently at very high levels, it is
also true that:
-
marginal
capacity for Oil is extremely constrained, (Capacity Utilization at
97%, not 75% or 78% as in the 80’s and 90’s),
-
global
demand with China adding 180,000 new cars to the road PER week is
well embarked on a new secular rise, and
-
unlike
the 1980s or 1990s when OPEC Oil cuts were ineffective in putting a
“floor” under Oil, in the new reality of the 21st
century, [accelerating global consumption cast against the backdrop
of “virtually zero” spare capacity and the even larger specter
of “Peak Oil” starting this year] OPEC is highly
empowered and even small production cuts will rapidly shore up
prices.
Bottom
Line:
The
odds of anything less then $55 Crude Oil seem very far removed --
recession or no recession. In my view, the outlook for a solid recovery
in Energy prices for this point forward seems like a very high
probability event. For Crude Oil any move back above $60 will confirm
that a major bottom has been seen.

Technically,
Crude Oil is now showing pronounced positive divergences on both the
daily and hourly charts and is set up against the backdrop of major,
long-term support at the 200-day lower band between $57 and $58. With
the Medium Term RSI very oversold, odds are high that Oil should rally
back up across the entire range over the next few months with prices
back above $70 quite likely.
On a
pure Elliott basis, a multi-month rally back up across the range toward
the mid-$70’s would likely develop as the “B” Wave of a larger
unfolding “A-B-C” correction. Under this outcome, the price of Crude
Oil could establish a high level trading range over the next 12 months
between $57 and $75, averaging out at around $68 per barrel.

On
the longer-term chart shown above, I note that the 9 week RSI – a very
medium-term gauge – is fully oversold below +30. Over the balance of
the last few decades, these kinds of readings have always put a floor
under Oil prices for at least a few months, if not accompanied major
lows.
In
my view, the above outlook is reasonable for a slow growth economy and
would likely be quite conservative if geopolitical tensions begin to
increase with either Iran or North Korea. For the Oil Bears and Short
Sellers, now would be a good time to think twice.
Frank

© 2006 Frank Barbera
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