CL: Crude Oil at a Crossroads as Geopolitics Meet Key Levels

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Recent Sentiment and Key Headlines Driving Crude

Crude oil sentiment over recent weeks has been shaped by a renewed mix of geopolitical risk and shifting expectations around global supply discipline. Headlines tied to Venezuela and Iran have been particularly influential, adding a layer of risk premium back into the market after a prolonged period of bearish positioning.

In Iran, renewed domestic unrest has been a notable catalyst. Protests that emerged in late December were initially sparked by economic pressures, including currency weakness, elevated inflation, and deteriorating living standards. As demonstrations spread across several major cities, concerns shifted from purely domestic stability toward potential implications for energy production and exports. While Iranian crude flows have not seen immediate disruption, the market has reacted to the increased uncertainty around enforcement of sanctions, internal security priorities, and the broader risk of escalation in an already fragile region.

Venezuela remains another key variable. Ongoing questions around sanctions compliance, export licenses, and the sustainability of recent production gains have kept traders cautious about assuming incremental supply will remain consistent. Any tightening of enforcement or breakdown in negotiations could quickly alter expectations, particularly given the market’s sensitivity to marginal barrel availability.

Beyond geopolitics, crude continues to trade against a mixed macro backdrop. Global growth expectations remain uneven, with slowing industrial activity in some economies offset by resilient consumption elsewhere. At the same time, OPEC plus communication has reinforced a willingness to manage supply if downside pressure accelerates. Together, these factors have kept sentiment reactive and highly responsive to both headlines and technically defined levels rather than driven by a clear fundamental trend.

What the market has done

• In November 2025, the market was in a grind trend down to bid block 1, where there was a liquidity check and buyers responded by holding the 56 level.

• Since December, the market has been in a block step trend up due to improving risk sentiment, renewed geopolitical premium, and reduced willingness by sellers to press below established value.

• In the past week, the market imbalanced out of bid block 3 above the 62.4 area (the composite HVA) and rotated higher toward the 65 area at daily level 2. This move coincided with a noticeable rise in geopolitical risk premium in oil markets as tensions between the U.S. and Iran escalated. Markets were responding to reports that the U.S. was considering possible military action if Iran did not negotiate a settlement on key issues, which was interpreted by traders as increasing the chance of supply disruption in the Persian Gulf. This elevated risk pricing helped push crude higher into the 65 area as participants priced in the possibility that instability could affect exports or shipping routes through the Strait of Hormuz. During the same period, there were also reports that Iran had announced live-fire exercises in the Strait of Hormuz, a key oil chokepoint, reinforcing those risk premiums even though no actual supply disruption occurred. The combination of geopolitical headlines and elevated risk appetite drove sellers to defend higher levels only after the initial breakout, leading the market back down toward 62.5 where responsive orders re-entered.

• Sellers responded by pushing price back down toward the 62.5 area, which corresponds with the weekly 0.5 SD low, signaling responsive selling rather than initiative downside continuation. This pullback was supported by an easing of the geopolitical risk premium that had driven the prior breakout. Over the weekend, no U.S. strike on Iran actually took place, and comments from U.S. leadership over the weekend suggested that Iran and Washington were “seriously talking” about negotiations rather than immediate military action. These remarks reduced the acute fear of an imminent strike that had been pushing oil toward multi-month highs late last week. As a result, the risk premium priced into crude unwound somewhat when markets reopened, and prices retraced back toward the 62.5 area as traders reassessed the likelihood of a near-term supply disruption.

What to expect in the coming weeks

The 62.5 area, which marks the level where the market imbalanced out of bid block 3 last week, remains the key level to monitor.

Bullish Scenario

• If the market holds above the 62.5 area, expect a rotation back up toward the 66 area (daily level 2), where sellers are likely to respond initially.

• If sellers fail to regain control at 66, the market could extend higher toward the 67.5 area, which aligns with the 28 Jul 2025 VPOC and the weekly 0.5 SD high.

• Acceptance above that zone would open the door for a test of the 70 area, corresponding with the weekly 1.0 SD high and a more pronounced shift in medium term structure.

Neutral Scenario

• If buyers defend the 62.5 area but sellers respond firmly at 66, expect a two-way auction to develop.

• In this case, price is likely to re- establish value and work through the repair of the previous week’s LVA, favoring rotational trade rather than trend continuation.

Bearish Scenario

• If buyers fail to defend the 62.5 area, expect a move back down into bid block 3 toward 59.7, which aligns with the weekly 1.0 SD low.

• Further downside could test the 59 area, defined by the bid block 3 low and the CVAL, where buyers are expected to respond and attempt to stabilize price.

Conclusion

Crude oil is currently balancing well defined technical structure against an evolving geopolitical backdrop. Risk premiums re-entered the market as unrest in Iran, U.S. rhetoric around a potential strike, and Iran’s live firing exercises near the Strait of Hormuz raised concerns about supply disruption, even though no strike ultimately materialized. The absence of escalation over the weekend led to some unwinding of that premium, reinforcing the recent pullback as responsive rather than initiative selling. At the same time, Venezuela remains a moderating variable, with questions around sanctions enforcement and incremental supply limiting follow through on both extremes.

From a technical perspective, price remains anchored around the 62.5 area, which continues to act as the primary pivot for directional intent. Acceptance above this level would favor renewed upside rotation toward higher distribution targets, while failure to hold would suggest a return into lower value and corrective trade. As geopolitical headlines continue to ebb and flow, traders should remain focused on how price responds at key levels.
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Acronyms:
C - Composite
w - Weekly
m - Monthly
VAH - Value Area High
VAL - Value Area Low
VPOC - Volume Point of Control
LVN - Low Value Node
HVN - High Value Node
LVA - Low Value Area
SP - Single print

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