Oil set for congestion after the recovery from the trap on the daily chart

Daily oil chartThe rout in oil prices on the 26th of November was another trap move which has much in common with that for Tesla, but in this case for a commodity, but where the same principles apply from a volume price perspective on the daily chart. In this instance it was the daily candle also associated with a volatility trigger that moved the price of oil a colossal distance on the day, opening at $78.13 per barrel before closing at $67.94 per barrel, a move of over $10 per barrel on the day. Yet look at the volume and compare this to other down days, and whilst the volume bar is the highest on the chart, it is only marginally higher than some, and a mile below what it should be. Such an extreme move requires a huge effort and one where we would expect to see volume two or three times higher than it is, so the conclusion is simple. Once again this is a trap move by the big operators looking to draw the unwary into weak positions before reversing the move in due course which is ultimately what occurred.

Note also how the volume under the down days which follow falls away dramatically confirming this lack of selling with buyers stepping in first on the 2nd of December, then buying again on the 20th of December as the rally gets underway duly taking the price all the way back to the VPOC at just below $80 per barrel. Note too, that on the extreme down day, our Quantumtrading volatility indicator was also triggered where our expectation is either congestion or a reversal and merely confirms the trap nature of the move. Now with oil re-establishing its bullish momentum, in the short term, we can expect to see congesition around the $80 per barrel area where the volume point of control currently sits, before the commodity makes a further attempt to breach resistance at $84 per barrel in the longer term.

By Anna Coulling

About Anna 2016 Articles
Hi – my name is Anna Coulling and I am a full time currency, commodities and equities trader. I have been involved in both trading and investing for over fifteen years and have traded many different financial instruments, from options and futures to stocks and commodities. I write and publish articles ( mostly for free ) for UK and international publications on a wide variety of financial issues, and in particular I enjoy helping others learn how to invest and trade.

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