Energy & precious metals - weekly review and outlook

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Investing.com -- The economy and geopolitics basically rule supply and demand of commodities. The economy dictates demand more than supply. Geopolitics, conversely, controls supply rather than demand. If what transpired in the just-ended week was economic worry depressing the price of oil, then you’re likely to get some of the opposite this week: geopolitics, in the form of the Israel-Hamas war, driving crude prices up.

How much higher? That’s something even the Saudis probably can’t answer at this moment.

Oil prices fell between 9% and 11% last week, depending whether it's US crude or Brent you’re looking at. It was the biggest weekly slump since March and was deeper than any weekly rally over the past three months. It came as US Treasury yields at 16-year highs and a dollar at a 10-month peak pressured other currencies and economies while consumption of gasoline — the No. 1 fuel product in the United States — was at a seasonal low of 25 years.

The week we are entering is quite a different one. Even without the Israel-Hamas war, the dollar could be one reason for recovery in commodities denominated in the currency, including oil. After reaching its highest level since November on Tuesday, the dollar slid for the remaining three days of last week.

Sunil Kumar Dixit, a technical chartist for markets and regular collaborator with Investing.com, sees profit-taking in the coming week weighing further on theDollar Index, which pits the US currency against six other majors, namely the euro, yen, pound, Swiss franc, Swedish krona and Canadian dollar.

“The Dollar Index faced strong resistance at that 107.35 high and has started declining, with the 3 Black Crows formation on its daily chart,” said Dixit. “Immediate support is seen at 105.78 which is likely to be breached eventually, exposing 23.6% fibonacci retracement zone 105.52. The path of resistance is likely to shift to 106.50 -106.60.”

“Subsequent weakness below 105.50 will extend decline to 104.70 and 104.35 followed by major support at 103.50 which aligns with 100-day SMA, or Simple Moving Average, as well as the 50% Fibonacci zone.”

That’s for the dollar. Now for the Israel-Hamas conflict, which threatens to redraw power stakes in the Middle East more forcefully than any singular event of the past 30 years.

As aforementioned, how deep an impact it would have on oil prices is not known. But with the showdown itself being in the super-sensitive zone which is central to oil production, an intelligent guess is that prices would be higher in the immediate days as the trade tries to figure out if supply would indeed be affected and to what extent.