Oil Prices Soar on U.S. Sanctions Despite Weak Fundamentals

01:54 PM @ Friday - 24 October, 2025

US sanctions on Russia’s top oil firms sent have sent WTI crude surging, but the backdrop remains tricky. The futures curve was in contango beforehand, signalling soft demand. Technical signals show the market testing a key level at $60, with the near-term direction likely to be dictated by how prices react around that zone.

Fresh Russian Sanctions Spark Rally

The US has slapped new sanctions on Russia’s biggest oil firms, Rosneft and Lukoil, in a fresh push to squeeze the Kremlin’s war funding. Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said the move was aimed at ending Putin’s “senseless war,” coming just hours after Russia carried out missile drills that included intercontinental launches. It followed growing pressure on Donald Trump to get tougher on Moscow as his efforts to broker peace continue to stall.

The shift marks a big change in tone from Washington, which only a week ago looked set to hold off on more action. Oil prices have jumped after the announcement, while Europe rolled out another sanctions package banning Russian LNG. The US also gave Ukraine the green light to use long-range missiles supplied by Western allies, with Sweden confirming plans to send Gripen fighter jets as support ramps up across Europe.

Even before the announcement, the crude futures curve was in contango, reflecting softer demand relative to available supply. Even though it’s now flipped, it raises immediate doubts about how durable this latest rally will be, particularly if fundamentals fail to justify the geopolitical premium now being priced in.

With geopolitical tensions heating up again, the question now is whether the latest bounce in WTI has staying power—or if it’s just another knee-jerk rally that will be faded like so many others before it.

WTI Crude Tests Key Level

There were signs that directional risks for WTI crude oil were skewing higher even before the announcement arrived, with a string of hammer candles seen on the daily timeframe above a known support zone earlier this week. That was followed by a bullish engulfing candle on Wednesday before the announcement sent the price hurtling higher in early Asian trade on Thursday, seeing it break the downtrend it had been sitting in since late September.

The price has now stalled at $60, a level that acted as both support and resistance for considerable periods earlier this year. As such, it looms as a key level to build trades around depending on how the near-term price action evolves.

Given the prior bullish signals and bullish news flow, a break of $60 would allow for longs to be established above the level with a stop below for protection, targeting $61.50 initially with the 50-day simple moving average, October high of $63, $65 resistance or key 200-day moving average other options after that. If considering the setup, it would be preferential to see the price break, retest and bounce from $60 before entering the trade, minimizing the risk of a bull trap.

Alternatively, if the price is unable to break sustainably above $60, it would allow for the setup to be flipped, with shorts established beneath the level with a stop above for protection. $58 saw some action over recent weeks, making both it and $56 potential targets.

While RSI (14) and MACD continue to tilt bearish, the overall momentum picture is one where downside strength is dissipating quickly. RSI (14) has broken its downtrend and quickly approaching the neutral level of 50 while MACD is now curling back towards the signal line but remains in negative territory. Given we’re dealing with headline-driven markets, the preference would be put more emphasis on price action in this environment.