Light crude oil futures are trading flat on Friday, maintaining support above the near-term pivot at $62.59 and the 50-day moving average of $62.00. After four sessions of tight consolidation, the market is on edge for a potential breakout.
Bulls are eyeing resistance levels at $64.19 and $64.40, with a clean breach possibly extending the rally toward the 200-day moving average at $66.49. On the downside, a break below the 50-day MA opens the door to rangebound trade with support near $59.74.
At 11:32 GMT, Light Crude Oil Futures are trading $63.36, down $0.01 or -0.02%.
U.S. crude is increasingly facing headwinds in export markets as OPEC+ ramps up production. Since April, the alliance—led by Saudi Arabia and Russia—has added or pledged to add 1.37 million bpd back into the market, roughly 62% of the planned 2.2 million bpd supply return.
This surge comes as global refiners, particularly in Europe and Asia, gain access to a wider slate of crude options, reducing their reliance on U.S. light sweet grades.
Exports of U.S. crude slipped to 3.8 million bpd in May from 4 million in April, according to EIA data. Notably, flows of light sweet crude to Europe fell to 1.4 million bpd from 1.6 million.
Traders are seeing price erosion in key U.S. grades: WTI-Midland’s premium to U.S. futures has dropped 45% since March, while Light Louisiana Sweet has fallen about 30% to a $2.70 premium.
The demand slowdown is tied to refiners’ shifting preferences. While light crudes are simpler to process, global investments in refining infrastructure are favoring medium and heavy sour crudes, which offer better margins when priced lower. As Europe prepares for peak summer output and Asian refineries exit turnaround season, demand has skewed toward medium grades—further reducing appetite for U.S. light sweet barrels.
WTI is also losing competitiveness in Asia, with Murban crude from the UAE pricing aggressively. Analysts note that CPC Blend from Kazakhstan and additional volumes from Brazil, Guyana, Libya, and Norway are giving buyers more alternatives. Unless European refiners increase intake, U.S. exporters could continue to lose share.
The technical setup points to indecision, but fundamental pressures are mounting. Rising global supply, softening U.S. export flows, and a tilt toward heavier crudes suggest the rally in WTI may face strong resistance. Unless bulls clear $64.40 convincingly, the bias leans bearish in the short term, with a probable return to rangebound trading near $60 if the 50-day MA fails to hold.
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Mr.Hyerczyk is a technical analyst, market researcher, educator and trader. Jim is an expert in the area of patterns, price and time analysis, Forex and stocks.