EMD052 - Strategic Positioning: Crude Reclaims $60, Gas Surges 4%

10/11/2025 5 min Episodio 24
EMD052 - Strategic Positioning: Crude Reclaims $60, Gas Surges 4%

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Episode Synopsis


Welcome to Energy Markets Daily, brought to you by DailyDominanceNow.com. Monday, November 10, 2025 — Strategic Positioning: Crude Reclaims $60, Gas Surges 4%. Today, we set the strategic framework for the new week, examining crude's bounce from Friday's breakdown and natural gas's explosive 4% surge. WTI crude oil reclaimed the $60 level on Monday, rising to $60.26, up 0.85% from Friday's close at $59.60. This bounce is driven by two factors: optimism that the U.S. government shutdown might end soon, potentially boosting demand, and geopolitical supply risks from Ukraine drone strikes and tighter U.S. sanctions on Russian oil companies like Rosneft and Lukoil. However, the technical picture remains bearish. WTI is trading in a range with key support at $59.25 and resistance near $61.50. The descending channel from early November is still intact, and crude is testing resistance near the channel top around $60.20. The question for the week: Is this a dead-cat bounce or a genuine reversal? The fundamental backdrop argues for caution. OPEC+ paused production increases from January to March 2026, citing concerns about a seasonal dip in demand and a looming supply surplus in early 2026. Global supply is expected to outpace demand, with non-OPEC producers, particularly the U.S., increasing production. Investors are awaiting market outlook reports from OPEC and the International Energy Agency this week for fresh insights. The structural oversupply thesis remains intact, and crude's burden of proof is on the bulls to break above $61.50 and invalidate the descending channel. Natural gas delivered the week's most explosive move, surging 4.01% to $4.49 on Monday. This marks a 43.94% gain over the past month and a 53.70% increase compared to the same time last year. The rally is driven by winter demand positioning, but it faces near-term resistance. U.S. natural gas futures had previously retreated over 2% to $4.24 after a rally pushed prices to an eight-month high, attributed to increased output and forecasts of mild weather that would reduce near-term heating demand. The critical question: Can natural gas sustain momentum above $4.40, or will mild weather forecasts and increased output trigger a pullback toward $4.00? The week ahead will be defined by key catalysts. OPEC and the IEA will release their monthly outlook reports, providing crucial guidance on global supply-demand balances. The EIA will publish weekly inventory data on Thursday, a key indicator of supply-demand balance. Traders are also awaiting U.S. inflation data and monitoring geopolitical developments around Russian sanctions and Ukrainian infrastructure attacks. Weather forecasts for North America and Europe will be critical for natural gas demand expectations. The levels that matter: For crude, support at $59.25 and resistance at $61.50. A break above $61.50 targets $63, while a breakdown below $59.25 reopens $58.00. For natural gas, resistance at $4.50 and support at $4.00. A sustained move above $4.50 targets $5.00, while a breakdown below $4.00 signals a deeper pullback toward $3.60. The strategic framework for the week is clear: crude is fighting oversupply with geopolitical support, while natural gas is riding winter demand strength with near-term volatility. The divergence between crude's structural headwinds and natural gas's demand tailwinds will persist through year-end. Energy capital inquiries: [email protected] — subject: Energy Capital.

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