Chart Of The Day: Oil Depressed By Dollar, Delta Variant, Diminishing Economy

 | Aug 19, 2021 15:29

After an overheated first half of the year, oil has been ranging since July. The price, which has now topped out, is likely to attract short-sellers and scare away bulls.

Crude's luster has been waning since the price peaked on July 6, when the commodity hit its highest levels since 2014. That coincided with the market's shift in mood from optimism regarding the global economic recovery to pessimism on the matter, as the rate of contagion from the Delta variant accelerated and the virus once again grabbed hold of the news cycle.

The persistent, and still spreading COVID strain, has forced the return of social restrictions and disrupted demand for WTI during the crucial summer travel season. Plus, yesterday’s FOMC minutes release revealed that most of the Fed's regulators believe it’s time to begin tapering the central bank’s bond purchasing. That boosted the dollar, which also happens to be the base currency for crude, making oil more expensive for importers, thereby likely curbing additional demand.

As well, yesterday's EIA release indicated that though oil inventories fell, gasoline stockpiles rose, possibly providing a leading indicator regarding what’s ahead for oil.

With those fundamental indicators augering a continued slump in the price of oil, technicals appear to be in agreement.