Crude Oil Looks Weak, both Technically and Fundamentally
Commodities / Crude Oil Jul 10, 2009 - 10:52 AM GMTBy: Mike_Shedlock
 As hyperinflationists scream from the top of their lungs about the rebound in   oil prices, others calmly note Japan’s Producer Prices Fell a Record 6.6% in June.
As hyperinflationists scream from the top of their lungs about the rebound in   oil prices, others calmly note Japan’s Producer Prices Fell a Record 6.6% in June.
Japan’s producer prices fell at a   record pace in June as oil costs declined and companies required fewer materials   amid a global recession. The costs companies pay for commodities and   unfinished goods tumbled 6.6 percent from a year earlier after sliding a revised   5.5 percent in May, the Bank of Japan said today in Tokyo.
    
    The   year-on-year drop in costs was the biggest since the central bank started   compiling the report in 1960. Prices fell 0.3 percent in June from May, when   they declined a revised 0.5 percent, today’s report said.
    
  Consumer prices   excluding fresh food, the central bank’s preferred gauge of inflation, fell 1.1   percent in May from a year earlier, the sharpest decrease since comparable   figures were first compiled in 1971. Corporate service prices dropped a record 3   percent.
$WTIC Light Sweet Crude -   Weekly Chart
    
    
    
    While the rebound   looks impressive on a log chart, Fibonacci retrace levels show the real story.   Crude oil price did not even muster the strength to get to the 38.2% retrace   level.
    
    Moreover, technicals are now pointing down as evidenced by the   moving average convergence/divergence (MACD) and and commodity channel index   (CCI) in the above chart. A pullback to $50 or even $40 is certainly not out of   the equation. And if that happens, expect to see media concerns over   deflation.
    
    The truth is the rebound in oil prices proved nothing in   regards to the inflation/deflation debate, nor will a retest of the December   lows prove anything should it happen.
    
    Inflation is a monetary event not a   price event. And even if inflation was regarded as a price event Speculation In China Does Not Constitute Inflation In The   US.
    
    Oil is subject to peak oil concerns, increasing demand from   China, and speculative pressures. As such, in isolation, the price of oil is a   poor measure for inflation regardless of what ones view of inflation and   deflation is.
    
    For traders, the technicals and the fundamentals both look   weak.
    
    Green shoots are withering on the vine, fuel supplies are rising, Crude oil supply far outstrips motorist demand, tankers at sea   act as floating storage, and the technicals look awful. For now, that is what   matters. Peak oil be damned.
  
By Mike "Mish" Shedlock 
http://globaleconomicanalysis.blogspot.com 
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 Mike Shedlock / Mish is a registered investment advisor representative for SitkaPacific Capital Management . Sitka Pacific is an asset management firm whose goal is strong performance and low volatility, regardless of market direction. 
  
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