Energy & precious metals - weekly review and outlook

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By Barani Krishnan

Investing.com -- So, how low could ​​oil go in the coming week?

Let’s not kid ourselves that it isn’t what every crude trader wants to know, though those who are long will also be wondering if there will be a rebound adequate and soon enough to make up for what happened in the just-ended week.

I think it’s safe to say that a 13% loss on the week — the worst since the pandemic — wasn’t anywhere in the wildest fantasies of oil bears. But now that they’ve got it, those shorting the market would be wondering how much lower they can drive it.

If my regular collaborator on technical charts, Sunil Kumar Dixit, is right — and I’ve no reason to doubt him — U.S. crude’s U.S. West Texas Intermediate, which settled on Friday at $66.74 per barrel, after a 15-month low at $65.27 — could go below $60 in the near-term.

“If we buck the $62 level and selling intensifies, expect a drop to the major support at the 100-Month SMA of $58.90,” Dixit said, referring to the Simple Moving Average marker for WTI.

But Dixit also thinks crude prices might rebound, even return to their most recent $70 perch, before going any lower than $58.

“There's a strong possibility of a technical spring from the current lows,” he said. “If it doesn’t happen right away, it could upon reaching the support areas of $62 and $58.90. We have initial rebound targets at $69.20 and $71.50. We believe a technical rebound will start either from current lows of $65, as WTI has already tested the 200-week SMA of $66.18.”

There’s something else happening this week that has major ramifications not just for oil but all markets and cannot be ignored: the Federal Reserve rate decision on Wednesday.

The Fed is expected to go for another 25-basis point hike at its March 22 meeting. Wall Street, of course, wants the central bank to stop all rate hikes so that the S&P 500 can be driven up another 500 points. The Fed is being cautioned that more monetary tightening could lead to another financial crisis like in 2008. That warning is emotional blackmail in another name as the central bank is being told that the banking crisis is entirely the fault of its interest rates, not reckless risk-taking by the executives of the financial firms that went under.

The banking crisis is also pitted against what is described as a genuine supply-demand crisis in oil. Day in and out, we hear the refrain of oil bulls on how precariously tight supply is.

“While demand is going up, we’re seeing global production fall,” Phil Flynn, analyst at Chicago’s Price Futures Group and one of the loudest voices on the long side of oil, said in his daily note on Friday.