My tummy tells me we should find some good technical support around the $58-60 area on the daily charts, which would not violate the channel support on the weekly chart that is still firmly in an uptrend overall. However, this would complete the head & shoulders on the daily crude chart and the rather dramatic A.B.C correction on the unleaded gasoline contract. I look for support in the gasoline at 1.6000 basically back at level we saw last May before the superspike to 2.9200 post-Katerina. A lot of ground has been covered in a short period of time. However, I would not discount a move lower to 1.5000? Looking at the heating oil it looks like it may find some buying at 1.8000. The correction has been much less dramatic than unleaded, probably due to support from nat gas, which is still firmly above $12.00 where the likely long-term buying interest lies.
Supernova watches the intermonth spreads a lot more than I do as he has much more experience than I, but even I cannot help but notice how much they have moved recently. Crude went from contango to backwardation, but not much once NOV goes off the board today. Heating oil looks like a bell curve with the peak in FEB. My thought is to buy the backend of the heating oil season as the DOE reserves in low sulfur diesel look very low by historical standards and if it is a cold winter then refiners may not have time to build stocks in diesel while pumping out heating oil. Mind you APR heating oil is still 17 cents higher than MAR gasoline, so I am not sure whether to spread it against gasoline or sell APR crude? That would lock in a crack spread of $18 a barrel vs. $11 in the gasoline? Dunno, just ruminating out loud here.
I have to think that higher interest rates and higher energy costs this winter are going to squeeze the consumer and the economy will slowdown. I cannot see any event on the horizon which will further forestall this eventuality. The consumer's home equity is already tapped out, interest rates are rising and we have record personal debt and low savings rates. We may see growth elsewhere in the world to alleviate the poor situation we see in Europe in America, but basically I think it will be insufficient to help out a stretched household at home. Therefore, I also see some demand destruction in a slower economy and also less discretionary driving. We are already seeing overall demand down about 3.0% if you can trust the EIA's figures yesterday? Hmmm?
But we still have a lot of oil rig, pipeline & refining capacity in the Gulf down and I do not see that situation magically righting itself, and you have to calculate in the possibility of refinery maintenance, which has been delayed, but not indefinately, as well as the outside possibility of a fire or some other calamity occuring. The big variable now being this winter's weather. Logic tells me to buy the crack spreads, but that was a very expensive hobby this month. Lick my wounds and climb back on?

The organized state is a wonderful invention whereby everyone can live at someone else's expense.