Showing posts with label Petromatrix. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Petromatrix. Show all posts

Tuesday, November 1, 2011

Crude Oil Declines Below $90 on China Manufacturing Slowdown, European Debt

Crude oil fell below $90 a barrel for the first time in a week in New York on speculation commodity demand will falter as Chinese manufacturing slows and European leaders struggle to contain the region’s debt crisis.

Futures slid as much as 3.8 percent, after posting their biggest gain last month since May 2009, amid signs of higher production from OPEC members as Libya bolstered exports. China’s Purchasing Managers’ Index fell for the first time in three months in October, a report showed. Greek Prime Minister George Papandreou said he will submit the European Union’s new financing deal for a national referendum.

“The list of things weighing on the market is long,” said Olivier Jakob, managing director at Petromatrix GmbH in Zug, Switzerland, who correctly predicted that this year’s oil rally would stall. “There’s the Chinese PMI, the Greek referendum taking EU leaders by surprise, the euro-dollar collapsing.”

Oil for December delivery declined as much as $3.56 to $89.63 a barrel in electronic trading on the New York Mercantile Exchange and was at $90.56 as of 12:48 p.m. London time. Futures fell 0.1 percent yesterday and climbed 18 percent in October......Read the entire article.


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Wednesday, October 14, 2009

Bloomberg, Jakob Says: Oil’s Rally May Halt at $78.40


Crude oil’s rise beyond the one year high reached today may be checked by a resistance level first encountered three years ago, according to technical analysis by consultants Petromatrix GmbH. Crude climbed to $75.15 a barrel in New York today, its highest price since last October. The rally may dissipate as it approaches $78.40, the highest price reached in 2006, the energy consultant said. The likelihood of crude breaking this threshold will be determined by movements in the U.S. dollar, it added.

“This stands out as the next resistance level,” Petromatrix Managing Director Olivier Jakob said in an interview from Zug, Switzerland. “It was the high in 2006, and also strong resistance in 2007. When it was broken in 2007, crude moved to the next level, which was $100.” Oil rose to a then record of $78.40 a barrel on July 14, 2006 as conflict between Israel and Hezbollah stoked concern Middle East crude exports might be disrupted. In 2007, seven months of price gains snapped after oil reached $78.77 on Aug. 1, and the commodity lost about $9 during the rest of that month before resuming its upward path.....read the entire article.