Energy Markets Daily

Week 23 Opens

3 min · 1 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio Week 23 Opens

Descripción

Monday, June 1, 2026. CRUDE OIL: WTI opened week $88.50-$89.44, up from Friday's close. Day's range: Low $88.45-$89.17, High $91.25-$94.74. Intraday volatility, prices rising toward $90-$94 range. SETUP: Crude consolidating after May pullback. Geopolitical risk premium still elevated. But negotiations breaking down. Iran halted negotiations with US on June 1, vowed to completely block Strait of Hormuz, citing ceasefire violations and other issues. Major development: If Iran closes Strait, crude spikes to $100+ immediately. KEY LEVELS: Support $88, Resistance $92, above that $95-$100. SETUP: If Iran closes Strait, expect break above $95, target $100-$110. If negotiations resume and deal signed, expect break below $88, target $80-$85. NATURAL GAS: Henry Hub spot $3.10 on May 26 (up 6.16% from prior day's $2.92). June 2026 futures settled ~$3.04, nearby months ranging $3.08-$3.94. Markets Insider showing natural gas $3.18 on June 1 (down 3.34% that session). SETUP: Gas volatile, following crude higher on geopolitical risk, but fundamentals remain soft, storage ample, production high. KEY LEVELS: Support $2.85, Resistance $3.20, above that $3.50. SETUP: If crude spikes on Strait closure, expect gas to spike to $3.50+. If negotiations resume, expect gas to fade back to $2.85-$3.00. GEOPOLITICS: Iran halted negotiations with US on June 1. Earlier in week, Reuters reported US and Iran reached agreement to extend ceasefire by 60 days and lift shipping restrictions through Strait. PBS reported US and Iranian negotiators reached tentative deal to extend ceasefire by 60 days, start new nuclear talks, address Strait. But by June 1, Iran halted talks, vowed to completely block Strait, citing ceasefire violations. Washington Post reported US and Iran trading new strikes (US targeted sites near Hormuz, Iran retaliated). Trump said deal will work out well, but priorities include reopening Hormuz and nuclear limits. BOTTOM LINE: Crude at critical juncture. If Iran closes Strait, looking at $100-$110 crude. If negotiations resume and deal signed, looking at $80-$85 crude. Gas will follow crude higher or lower. Capital preservation first. Watch the Strait. Trade the data.

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episode What the Energy Market Looked Like on June 5, 2025 artwork

What the Energy Market Looked Like on June 5, 2025

Friday, June 6, 2026. ONE YEAR AGO. June 5, 2025. WTI crude oil approximately $62.77/bbl. Brent crude oil approximately $64.88/bbl. Futures settlement data shows open $64.91, high $65.86, low $64.63, close settle $65.34/bbl. Natural gas NYMEX front-month futures approximately $3.677/MMBtu. Daily range $3.62-$3.79. Henry Hub spot pricing softer. Next-day cash around $2.76-$2.85/MMBtu. BROADER CONTEXT: Oil prices range-bound/softening amid rising inventories, OPEC+ production adjustments, subdued demand growth before geopolitical tensions pushed Brent higher later month. Monthly averages showed Brent declining toward $63-$64/bbl lows by late May/early June. Natural gas futures hovered mid-$3 range, supported by seasonal factors, physical markets discounted. THE COMPARISON: Fast forward one year. June 2026. WTI trading around $91-$92, up 45% from June 5, 2025. Natural gas at $3.10-$3.18, down 13% from June 5, 2025. Why divergence? Geopolitical risk premium in crude (Iran war, Strait closure fears, supply disruption concerns). Natural gas decoupled. Fundamentals remain soft (oversupply, storage ample, production high). THE SETUP: One year ago, market pricing oversupply. Crude $62, Gas $3.68. Today, crude $91, gas $3.10. Crude spiked on geopolitics. Gas faded on fundamentals. Decoupling thesis validated. THE LESSON: Markets reprice on new information (geopolitics, supply, demand, technicals). One year ago, bear market for crude. Today, bull market driven by war premium. But underlying thesis remains: mean reversion, oversupply, structural headwinds. Trade the data. Not the narrative.

Ayer2 min
episode Geographic Feature: South Korea artwork

Geographic Feature: South Korea

Thursday, June 5, 2026. SOUTH KOREA. One of world's most import-dependent energy economies. Relies on foreign sources 90-95% of energy needs. Primarily crude oil and LNG. Negligible domestic fossil fuel production. No international oil/gas pipelines. Depends entirely on maritime tanker shipments. Creates structural vulnerabilities to geopolitical disruptions, chokepoints, supply shocks. CRUDE OIL IMPORTS: Just under 2.6 million barrels/day. Ranks among top global importers. Roughly 60%+ from Middle East. Highly exposed to Strait of Hormuz. Refineries 70-80% optimized for Middle Eastern heavy crude. Key ports: Busan, Gwangyang, Yeosu, Daesan. NATURAL GAS IMPORTS: South Korea among world's top LNG buyers. Key sources: United States (starting 2017 via KOGAS-Cheniere Sabine Pass deal 3.5 MTPA), Qatar/Middle East (21%+ of LNG), Australia, Russia Yamal LNG. Total LNG imports 46.3 Mt in 2024, only ~5.6 Mt from US. GEOPOLITICAL RISKS: Maritime chokepoints: Strait of Hormuz (critical 95%+ crude), Taiwan Strait, South China Sea, Suez/Persian Gulf routes. Tensions (Taiwan blockades, Houthi-style threats) could coincide with cyberattacks on LNG terminals, refineries, networks. Russia-Ukraine war disrupted flows, highlighted diversification needs. US LNG DIVERSIFICATION: Serves as diversification tool for energy security, reduce Middle East dependence. Shipping from US Gulf/future West Coast/Alaska projects avoid some Asian chokepoints. Faces economic hurdles amid declining domestic LNG demand during energy transition, occasional US export facility outages (Freeport). RUSSIAN LNG: Russian LNG exports Asia/South Korea via Yamal leverage shorter Arctic/Northern Sea Route distances. Persist despite sanctions. Illustrate shifting supply dynamics amid geopolitical realignments. INFRASTRUCTURE VULNERABILITIES: Climate risks (typhoons, sea-level rise) threaten ports handling 70%+ crude imports, 100% refining capacity. Major LNG terminals/refining hubs (Yeosu, Daesan) coastal/exposed. ENERGY SECURITY STRATEGY: Balance LNG's role in transition with diversification away from volatile regions. Structural dependence on seaborne imports from Middle East/elsewhere persists. Historical pipeline proposals (Russia via China/Sakhalin) not materialized at scale. BOTTOM LINE: South Korea barometer for Asian energy security. Chokepoint closures ripple through global economy. Watch Strait. Watch Taiwan. Watch ports.

4 de jun de 20262 min
episode What the Energy Market Looked Like in June 2006 artwork

What the Energy Market Looked Like in June 2006

Wednesday, June 4, 2026. TWENTY YEARS AGO. June 2006. WTI crude oil monthly average: $73.94/bbl. Specific WTI closing prices: June 2 $72.75, June 9 $71.64, June 16 $69.97, June 23 $70.78, June 29 $73.52. WTI stayed above $70/bbl for much of May-July 2006. Demand growth outpacing non-OPEC supply. OPEC Reference Basket May 2006 averaged $65.11/bbl, peaked $68.37 early month, volatile trading continued into June. NATURAL GAS: Henry Hub natural gas monthly average end June 2006 approximately $5.84/MMBtu, down slightly from $5.97 end May. Natural gas prices 2006 overall moderated from 2005 hurricane-driven highs. Summer levels supported by high storage but pressured by warm weather and power generation demand. CONTEXT: High oil prices driven by rapid demand growth (China booming), limited non-OPEC supply growth, earlier disruptions from Hurricane Katrina/Rita still echoing. Natural gas benefited from ample storage inventories. Retail gasoline averaged $2.70-$3.00/gallon during summer 2006, influenced by crude levels and refinery margins. THE COMPARISON: Fast forward twenty years. June 2026. WTI trading around $91-$92, up 23% from June 2006. Natural gas at $3.10-$3.18, down 46% from June 2006. Crude doubled in two decades. Gas collapsed. Why? Supply dynamics. Shale revolution. LNG exports. Oversupply in gas. Geopolitical risk premium in crude. THE LESSON: Markets evolve. Thesis changes. But fundamentals remain: supply, demand, geopolitics. Trade the data. Not the narrative.

3 de jun de 20262 min
episode Iran Halts Talks: Crude at the Crossroads artwork

Iran Halts Talks: Crude at the Crossroads

Tuesday, June 2, 2026. CRUDE OIL TECHNICALS: WTI trading $91.30-$91.33, down ~0.9% on day. Session range ~$91.30-$92.64. KEY LEVELS: Support $91.17 (below that $91.33, below that $91.55), Resistance $91.93 (above that $92.09, above that $92.31). TECHNICAL ANALYSIS: Investing.com technical summary Strong Sell overall. Moving averages show Sell (short-term MAs 5/10/20 periods signaling sell, MA50/100 buy, MA200 sell). Technical indicators Strong Sell (STOCH sell, CCI sell, ROC sell, RSI neutral ~49.8, MACD buy, several oversold readings STOCHRSI/Williams %R). SETUP: Markets at bottom of large consolidation range, seeking momentum amid headline-driven volatility. DailyForex June 2026 monthly forecast: WTI expected stay choppy/volatile near $100 level as key pivot area, $85 as major support amid ongoing Middle East supply/geopolitical risks, range-bound behavior likely persist. TradingView: Current price action $87-$92 range recently, overall technical rating Neutral, mixed signals across timeframes. LiteFinance technical outlook: Strong upward momentum on longer-term charts post-correction, nearest support shifted to $88-$90 zone, resistance ~$107 (potential $120), SMA50 uptrending, MACD positive, RSI stabilized. BROADER CONTEXT: Prices consolidating $85-$110 zone amid geopolitical tensions, Middle East supply risks supporting risk premium, June expectations lean toward choppiness rather than strong directional breakout. OVERALL TECHNICAL PICTURE: Short-term bearish/neutral pressure, Strong Sell on aggregates, short-term MAs and several oscillators negative, medium-term signals mixed, longer-term views point to potential support $85-$90 and upside toward $100-$107+, market appears range-bound/choppy around current levels $90-$100, influenced by geopolitics/consolidation. NATURAL GAS TECHNICALS: Henry Hub trading $3.0-$3.3 area, settlements near $3.04 or higher intraday. KEY LEVELS: Support $2.913 (1st), $2.786 (2nd), $2.715 (3rd). Resistance $3.111 (1st), $3.182 (2nd), $3.309 (3rd). Classic pivots S3 $3.126, S2 $3.151, S1 $3.171, Pivot $3.196, R1 $3.216, R2 $3.241, R3 $3.261. Additional context: 52-week Fib retracements ~38.2% near $3.224, psychological levels like $3.00. GEOPOLITICS: Iran halted negotiations with US on June 1, announced plans to fully block Strait of Hormuz. Iranian state media Tasnim stated negotiators would stop exchanging messages with US via intermediaries in retaliation for alleged ceasefire violations. Tehran would move to completely close strait. Oil prices rose 7%+ on report. LATE MAY CONTEXT: US officials reported close to agreement with Iran to extend existing ceasefire, reopen Strait of Hormuz to shipping, launch further talks on Iran's nuclear program. Reports indicated tentative MOU for 60-day ceasefire extension, unrestricted shipping through strait (no tolls/harassment, Iran to remove mines ~30 days), sanctions relief elements, limits on highly enriched uranium. Trump reportedly reviewed/edited proposed framework, sending tougher terms back (including strait/uranium destruction), deal described as largely negotiated but pending final approvals. SETUP: Crude at critical technical juncture, short-term bearish, but longer-term support $85-$90. If Iran closes Strait, expect break above $92.31, target $100-$110. If negotiations resume, expect break below $91.17, target $85-$88. Gas consolidating $2.913-$3.111, waiting for catalyst.

2 de jun de 20262 min
episode Week 23 Opens artwork

Week 23 Opens

Monday, June 1, 2026. CRUDE OIL: WTI opened week $88.50-$89.44, up from Friday's close. Day's range: Low $88.45-$89.17, High $91.25-$94.74. Intraday volatility, prices rising toward $90-$94 range. SETUP: Crude consolidating after May pullback. Geopolitical risk premium still elevated. But negotiations breaking down. Iran halted negotiations with US on June 1, vowed to completely block Strait of Hormuz, citing ceasefire violations and other issues. Major development: If Iran closes Strait, crude spikes to $100+ immediately. KEY LEVELS: Support $88, Resistance $92, above that $95-$100. SETUP: If Iran closes Strait, expect break above $95, target $100-$110. If negotiations resume and deal signed, expect break below $88, target $80-$85. NATURAL GAS: Henry Hub spot $3.10 on May 26 (up 6.16% from prior day's $2.92). June 2026 futures settled ~$3.04, nearby months ranging $3.08-$3.94. Markets Insider showing natural gas $3.18 on June 1 (down 3.34% that session). SETUP: Gas volatile, following crude higher on geopolitical risk, but fundamentals remain soft, storage ample, production high. KEY LEVELS: Support $2.85, Resistance $3.20, above that $3.50. SETUP: If crude spikes on Strait closure, expect gas to spike to $3.50+. If negotiations resume, expect gas to fade back to $2.85-$3.00. GEOPOLITICS: Iran halted negotiations with US on June 1. Earlier in week, Reuters reported US and Iran reached agreement to extend ceasefire by 60 days and lift shipping restrictions through Strait. PBS reported US and Iranian negotiators reached tentative deal to extend ceasefire by 60 days, start new nuclear talks, address Strait. But by June 1, Iran halted talks, vowed to completely block Strait, citing ceasefire violations. Washington Post reported US and Iran trading new strikes (US targeted sites near Hormuz, Iran retaliated). Trump said deal will work out well, but priorities include reopening Hormuz and nuclear limits. BOTTOM LINE: Crude at critical juncture. If Iran closes Strait, looking at $100-$110 crude. If negotiations resume and deal signed, looking at $80-$85 crude. Gas will follow crude higher or lower. Capital preservation first. Watch the Strait. Trade the data.

1 de jun de 20263 min