Quick Take
  • Brent oil price trades at $104.70 on May 22, sitting below one critical technical level.
  • President Trump’s call for a fast Iran deal is pulling the geopolitical risk premium out of crude.
  • Hedge funds are cutting longs, put hedging is climbing, and the chart is testing channel support.
  • The three signals are now lining up for a critical Brent crude test.

What Happened

Trump’s Iran Talks Pull Brent Oil Toward a Channel Break

Want more insights like this? Sign up for Editor Harsh Notariya’s Daily Newsletter here.

The recent slide has pushed Brent against the channel’s lower boundary. A clean break of that line would flip the trend from bullish to neutral/bearish, opening downside for the first time in five weeks. That bearish lean is already showing up in the speculative positioning data.

Market Context

Brent oil price trades at $104.70 on May 22, sitting below one critical technical level. President Trump’s call for a fast Iran deal is pulling the geopolitical risk premium out of crude.

President Trump told the country this week that the Iran war would end “fast”. He added that oil prices would drop sharply once a deal is reached.

Brent has been climbing inside an ascending parallel channel since April 17. The structure is a bullish formation where price rises between two parallel upward trendlines.

The shift signals fund managers are pulling bullish bets as the geopolitical risk premium fades. The options market is now confirming that move.

The volume ratio doubled from 0.15 on May 15 to 0.30 on May 21.

The volume jump means fresh put hedging is rolling in. Overall positioning stays bullish, but the directional conviction is softening fast. Three signals now align with the macro catalyst. The chart confirms the same story.

Brent Oil Price Levels Hinge on $100 Test

Brent oil price sits at $104.70 after losing the 20-day EMA at $105.41. The next test is the 50-day EMA at $100.27.

A clean break below $100 confirms the channel breakdown. The measured move target sits at $86.37. Between current price and the measured move, intermediate stops include $97.42 and $92.56.

The post Brent Oil Price Risks Drop Below $100 as Trump’s Iran Talks Trigger Long Exodus appeared first on BeInCrypto.

Why It Matters

Hedge funds are cutting longs, put hedging is climbing, and the chart is testing channel support. The three signals are now lining up for a critical Brent crude test.

The statement marks the clearest de-escalation signal from the White House this month. Geopolitical risk had been the main bid under crude since April.

The latest May 16 release shows positions at 169,900. That marks a drop of nearly 64,000 contracts, a 27% reduction in seven weeks.

Details

Speculators Cut Longs as Put-Call Hedging Builds

The CFTC Crude Oil speculative net positions report tracks long minus short positions held by hedge funds and non-commercial traders. The reading peaked at 233,600 contracts the week ending March 28.

BNO is the United States Brent Oil ETF, the main US-listed proxy for Brent crude. Its put-call ratio measures put option activity against call activity, where readings below 1.0 lean bullish.

That level overlaps with the 0.5 Fibonacci level at $100.83. The Fibonacci level maps potential support and resistance based on the prior major move. The confluence puts the $100 round number squarely in focus.

The 200-day EMA at $82.43 marks the ultimate structural floor. Below that, the 1.618 extension at $68.49 opens up.

For the bullish thesis to hold, Brent needs to reclaim $108.47 quickly. A daily close above $115.30 would invalidate the bearish setup entirely.

The $100 line separates a clean channel hold from a slide toward the $86 measured move target.