Crude oil today fell by 3.61%, currently consolidating at the lower end of the 59.1-62.4 oscillation channel. The US initial jobless claims data will be released tonight at 21:30, with market expectations at 215,000 and the previous figure at 208,000. This data will serve as a direct trigger point.
Why is this data so important? It will influence the Federal Reserve's expectations for interest rate cuts, thereby affecting the dollar's trend, and ultimately directly driving short-term fluctuations in crude oil. Coupled with the tug-of-war between supply and demand in the oil market and market sentiment swings, these factors may amplify the volatility of the data-driven market movements.
Currently, the price is stuck at the lower boundary of the range. My view is not to rush into short positions. It’s better to rely on key support and resistance levels for positioning, as this approach offers better risk control.
How to operate specifically?
**Long position perspective**: If the price can stabilize within the 59.0-59.5 range, you can enter a position, with a stop-loss below 58.5. The initial target is 60, and if it breaks through 60, then look towards 62.
**Short position perspective**: If resistance is encountered within the 60.5-61.0 range, consider shorting, with a stop-loss above 61.5. The initial target is 59, and if it breaks below, then look further down to 59.
(Disclaimer: This is just personal insight for reference only. All actual operations should follow the market conditions.)
View Original
This page may contain third-party content, which is provided for information purposes only (not representations/warranties) and should not be considered as an endorsement of its views by Gate, nor as financial or professional advice. See Disclaimer for details.
16 Likes
Reward
16
5
Repost
Share
Comment
0/400
AirdropCollector
· 8h ago
The 21:30 data is coming. This wave is indeed likely to surge sharply. Let's wait and see.
View OriginalReply0
MoneyBurner
· 8h ago
Here comes the data market to cut leeks again, I’ve bet everything on this non-farm payroll at 21:30.
View OriginalReply0
CodeAuditQueen
· 8h ago
The data trigger logic... feels similar to reentrancy attacks in smart contracts, both waiting for that critical signal to break through, then amplifying the volatility. The fluctuation around the expected number of 215,000 is indeed enough to play with.
View OriginalReply0
Blockchainiac
· 9h ago
The 21:30 data will cause a surge; everyone, don't sleep tonight.
View OriginalReply0
MetaverseLandlord
· 9h ago
Let's wait until the unemployment data drops before making a move. It's too risky to jump in now.
Crude oil today fell by 3.61%, currently consolidating at the lower end of the 59.1-62.4 oscillation channel. The US initial jobless claims data will be released tonight at 21:30, with market expectations at 215,000 and the previous figure at 208,000. This data will serve as a direct trigger point.
Why is this data so important? It will influence the Federal Reserve's expectations for interest rate cuts, thereby affecting the dollar's trend, and ultimately directly driving short-term fluctuations in crude oil. Coupled with the tug-of-war between supply and demand in the oil market and market sentiment swings, these factors may amplify the volatility of the data-driven market movements.
Currently, the price is stuck at the lower boundary of the range. My view is not to rush into short positions. It’s better to rely on key support and resistance levels for positioning, as this approach offers better risk control.
How to operate specifically?
**Long position perspective**: If the price can stabilize within the 59.0-59.5 range, you can enter a position, with a stop-loss below 58.5. The initial target is 60, and if it breaks through 60, then look towards 62.
**Short position perspective**: If resistance is encountered within the 60.5-61.0 range, consider shorting, with a stop-loss above 61.5. The initial target is 59, and if it breaks below, then look further down to 59.
(Disclaimer: This is just personal insight for reference only. All actual operations should follow the market conditions.)