Long-Term View Of Crude Oil Since 1990
By Corey Rosenbloom on March 2, 2009 | More Posts By Corey Rosenbloom | Author's Website
Crude Oil has come into a potential support area most traders might not be aware exists, but it’s evident from the long-term monthly chart. Let’s see this structure and what might be in store for crude, barring any further unforseen developments.
Crude Oil Monthly Chart:
Crude Oil ($WTIC as the benchmark index) has completed a seemingly perfect Elliott Wave pattern to the upside with a complete fractal 5-wave structure (not labeled) unfolding in the terminal 5th wave into mid-2008. Price peaked at $147 a barrel and began a shocking plunge that took hedge funds and the general investing community by surprise (which was happily a boon to the economy in the form of lower gas prices).
Under this count, prices has completed a violent Wave A (correction) into a level of confluence support. First, the rising 200 month moving average provided a floor that halted the downside pressure temporarily. Second, this level - the $38 range - has served twice as key resistance (in 2000 and 2003) and according to the “Polarity Principle,” old resistance becomes new (future) support. It’s possible that’s happening now.
In addition, the monthly close formed a bullish hammer candlestick on top of those support zones. Is support certain to hold? Absolutely not but Crude Oil is probably due some sort of counter-swing up perhaps to the $55 or higher level at a minimum.
Sometimes looking way back into price history can provide markers for possible support/resistance zones today. Crude has the potential to do that from these levels. Crude is experiencing sharp downside pressure today, so it’s possible the downtrend is just too much to overcome or that the economy is expected to be worse than expected… and it’s quite difficult to fight downtrends so do further analysis on your own.
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