Oil Bears, Still Excited? Look Out For The ‘V’ Sign

 | Jun 07, 2019 18:07

Nothing beats the exhilaration of being on the right side of a market. Even better, when the momentum seems totally on your side, prompting you to disregard all caution signs in the way. But regardless of the run you’re having, there’s one sign you should never ignore: the ‘V’ sign. It stands for volatility.

As bears in crude oil hunkered down for another satisfying close Thursday in a market heading for a 5% loss in two days, the tide suddenly turned, and turned forcefully against them. With just about 10 minutes to go, crude futures popped almost 2%. And they continued rising in post-settlement trade with the same vigor. Until then, oil bulls had few places to hide as the market threw everything, from collapsing demand caused by trade wars to abysmal stockpiles data, at them. Instead of retreating, they were now charging back at the bears, as the enemy in recent days—Mexico—appeared to have become a friend. Or had it?

As trading for Friday opened in Asia, oil markets were still climbing, away from the 5-month lows hit before Thursday’s recovery. But the news that sparked the turnaround had become a lot less potent.

The original driver of Thursday’s rebound was a Bloomberg headline that said the U.S. was considering delaying the 5% tariff on Mexican imports due on Monday. But even before the dust had fully settled on Thursday’s trade, it was apparent that traders had read little beyond the headline in dumping their short positions in oil.

h3 The Mexico News That Never Was/h3

The full Bloomberg story, as well as matching versions from the Washington Post to Wall Street Journal, had made clear that President Trump himself had not green-lighted the tariffs delay sought by Mexican officials locked in talks with their U.S. counterparts in Washington. Indeed, shortly after Thursday’s settlement in oil, White House press secretary new national emergency in order to implement sweeping tariffs on Mexico over the flow of Central American migrants to the U.S.

If so, where was the continued driver for Friday’s higher oil prices?