Tradier Blog

Trading Crude Oil & the U.S. Election

Written by Tradier Inc. | Nov 1, 2024 4:12:21 PM


Idea: Trading crude oil

Factors:

  • Nearby NYMEX crude oil futures have traded around the $70 per barrel level since late August.
  • The November 5 U.S. election could determine the path of least resistance of crude oil prices as U.S. energy policy is on the ballot.
  • Vice President Harris favors continuing the Biden administration’s energy policy, which addresses climate change by supporting alternative and renewable fuels and inhibiting the production and consumption of fossil fuels.
  • Former President Trump favors a “drill-baby-drill” and “frack-baby-frack” approach to achieve energy independence and increase U.S. exports.
  • A Harris win would likely keep petroleum pricing power with OPEC+, keeping prices stable or elevated.
  • A Trump win would likely considerably increase U.S. output above 13.5 million barrels daily, pushing oil prices lower.
  • Chinese demand and war in the Middle East are other factors impacting petroleum prices.

Idea: Trading crude oil on the election results

  • The NYMEX crude oil futures and futures options are the most direct route for crude oil trading.
  • The USO ETF moves higher and lower with nearby NYMEX crude oil prices.
  • The bullish UCO ETF product is a double-leveraged product that outperforms NYMEX crude oil futures on the upside on a percentage basis.
  • The bearish SCO ETF product is a double-leveraged product that outperforms NYMEX crude oil futures on the downside on a percentage basis.
  • Leverage involves time decay, making time and price stops necessary. 

Risk-reward:

  • Trading instead of investing in crude oil is likely the optimal approach in the current volatile environment.
  • A disciplined approach requires profit and acceptable loss levels at trade execution.
  • Adjusting stops and profit horizons are appropriate when the market moves in the anticipated direction.
  • Stick to stops when the price moves contrary to the expected direction to limit losses.

The November 5 U.S. election could cause significant price variance in oil futures, as the U.S. is the world’s leading crude oil consumer. Energy policy over the coming years will determine whether OPEC+ retains pricing power or if the United States taps its reserves and makes the cartel’s production policy less influential.