WTI crude oil futures climbed for a third consecutive session on Friday, nearing $66 per barrel, yet remained poised for their steepest weekly loss since March 2023. The market saw extreme volatility, with a $15-per-barrel range driven by heightened geopolitical tensions early in the week, followed by de-escalation signals that eased fears of regional supply shocks.
Supporting prices, U.S. summer fuel demand has lifted consumption, pushing crude inventories to their lowest seasonal level in 11 years. A weaker dollar also helped stabilize the market. Attention now shifts to U.S.–China trade talks and the pivotal OPEC meeting scheduled for July 6.
Natural gas futures are attempting a rebound after sliding from the $4.14 peak to a low of $3.40. The price has bounced off the 23.6% Fibonacci retracement level at $3.571 and is now hovering near $3.577. However, upside remains constrained by the cluster of resistance levels ahead, with the 50-period EMA at $3.79 and the 200-period EMA at $3.88 capping recent rallies.
Price would need to reclaim the $3.67–$3.76 range (38.2%–50% Fib zone) to shift momentum. Failure to gain ground above $3.58 could see sellers step back in, targeting $3.49 and $3.40. The current bounce appears corrective within a broader downtrend unless buyers break through key resistance.
WTI crude is trading at $65.65, holding just above a rising trendline support after last week’s steep $13 selloff from the $77.17 peak. Price is now compressed within a tight consolidation range, capped by the 200-period EMA at $66.20 and the 23.6% Fibonacci level at $67.09.
Despite the rebound from $63.98, upside attempts have stalled below declining averages. A breakout above $67.11 would expose the 38.2% retracement at $69.02, while failure to reclaim $66.20 may trigger a retest of the $64.00 pivot.
This coiling structure suggests a breakout is nearing, but direction remains unclear without a decisive close above or below the range. Momentum remains muted, awaiting clarity from fundamental drivers or technical confirmation.
Brent crude is consolidating near $67.91 after last week’s sharp decline from the $80.32 high. Price action remains capped below the 200-period EMA at $68.89, while buyers have struggled to break the 23.6% Fibonacci retracement at $69.93.
The recent range between $66.72 and $69.90 has compressed into a tight band, reflecting indecision as traders weigh broader macro drivers. The 50-period EMA at $71.53 remains distant, and the prevailing structure favors mean reversion unless a breakout confirms.
A close above $69.93 could open the path toward $71.91 and $73.52. Conversely, a breakdown below $66.75 would expose $64.96 and lower. Until then, Brent remains in a holding pattern with range-bound bias.
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