The Drone Hit - Or How Oil Bulls Decided To Ignore Trump’s U-Turn

 | Jun 21, 2019 17:28

To headline traders in oil, the presidential tweet coming more than 12 hours after the latest drone hit, provided the perfect opportunity to drop all caution and buy.

“Iran Made A Very Big Mistake!” U.S. President Donald Trump tweeted. Crude prices, already up 3% overnight on Tehran’s downing of a U.S. drone, immediately doubled their rally. They ended up almost 6% on the day—their biggest gain of the year.

What seemed to matter less to those long the market on Thursday was that Trump was already backtracking on his tweet, or rather clarifying it, well before trading in oil closed for the day.

Instead of blaming the Iranian state per se, as his initial response seemed to entail, the president told reporters at least an hour before the market wrapped that he thought the shooting down of the surveillance aircraft was the work of a “stupid” individual Iranian general at the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, who had made a “foolish” unintentional mistake.

Of course, Trump being Trump, he didn’t stop there. The president muddied his message by adding that “this country will not stand for it … you’ll soon find out”, when asked how his administration planned to respond. He even threw in a colorful observation of little value by describing the crisis as “a new wrinkle, a new fly in the ointment.”

h3 ‘Big’ But ‘Stupid’ Mistake That Oil Bulls Chose To Ignore/h3

But as clarifications on-the-fly go, Trump’s attempt to set the record straight was as good as it could get: Iran made a mistake—big and stupid maybe, but not intentional.

Yet, oil bulls decided to ignore the obvious in the president’s words, sending crude prices into the stratosphere after a week where the market was often unkind to them – including on Wednesday, when weekly U.S. oil data turned out to be overwhelmingly bullish and the Fed talked about the possibility of cutting interest rates. Oil bears, meanwhile, stood no chance of prevailing before the proverbial steamer—or train, truck, whatever you call it—of Thursday’s market momentum.