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Welcome to Energy Markets Daily, brought to you by DailyDominanceNow.com. Monday, November 17, 2025 — Strategic Positioning. We're back with live market updates. Today, we examine the critical price levels defining energy markets and what they mean for positioning into year-end. **Current Market Snapshot** WTI crude is trading at $59.44 per barrel. Brent sits at $63.74. Natural gas at Henry Hub closed last week at $3.60 per MMBtu. The December NYMEX contract is at $4.53. These aren't random numbers. They're battlegrounds. **Crude Oil - The $60 Floor** WTI has been consolidating around the $60 level. This is the line in the sand. Last week, crude turned lower as traders reacted to bearish supply projections, a stronger dollar, and surprise inventory builds. OPEC+ increased output by 137,000 barrels per day in November. This marks the eighth consecutive month of production increases. The EIA projects Brent will average $62.52 per barrel in Q4 2025, then drop to $55 per barrel in 2026. **The strategic question:** Can WTI hold $60? A break below $57 confirms bearish momentum. A close above $62 reopens upside. **China - The Demand Wildcard** China's oil demand is projected to peak in 2025 at 770 million tonnes. This is the inflection point. Crude imports are expected to increase by only 1% in 2025. Electric vehicles, LNG trucks, and high-speed rail are eroding transportation fuel demand. For crude markets, this means the era of demand-driven price support is ending. **Natural Gas - Structural Strength** Natural gas is a different story. Henry Hub spot prices are projected to average $3.90 per MMBtu during winter months. The EIA expects prices to average $4.00 per MMBtu in 2026, 16% higher than 2025. Why? U.S. LNG exports are expected to reach 14.9 billion cubic feet per day in 2025, a 25% increase from 2024. Storage levels are healthy at 3,960 Bcf, 4% above the five-year average. Natural gas is benefiting from structural demand while crude faces structural headwinds. **Strategic Positioning** Here's the playbook: **Crude:** Defensive. Watch the $60 level on WTI. A break below $57 opens downside to $55. **Natural gas:** Constructive. Winter demand and LNG export growth support prices. The $3.50–$4.00 range is the new baseline. **The divergence trade:** Long natural gas, short crude. This is a structural shift. **Catalyst Watch** This week: EIA inventory reports on Thursday. Watch for crude builds and gas draws. Next week: Thanksgiving holiday. Expect thin liquidity. December: OPEC+ meeting on December 1st. Will they pause production increases? **The Levels That Matter** WTI crude: Support at $57. Resistance at $62. Natural gas: Support at $3.50. Resistance at $4.00. Brent crude: Support at $62. Resistance at $66. **Final Word** The $60 level on WTI is the battleground. Below it, we're looking at $55 crude by year-end. Above it, we get a relief rally into December. Natural gas is the structural winner. Position accordingly. For inquiries: [email protected]. Subject: Energy Capital. This is Energy Markets Daily. We'll see you Tuesday for Technicals.
By EMDWelcome to Energy Markets Daily, brought to you by DailyDominanceNow.com. Monday, November 17, 2025 — Strategic Positioning. We're back with live market updates. Today, we examine the critical price levels defining energy markets and what they mean for positioning into year-end. **Current Market Snapshot** WTI crude is trading at $59.44 per barrel. Brent sits at $63.74. Natural gas at Henry Hub closed last week at $3.60 per MMBtu. The December NYMEX contract is at $4.53. These aren't random numbers. They're battlegrounds. **Crude Oil - The $60 Floor** WTI has been consolidating around the $60 level. This is the line in the sand. Last week, crude turned lower as traders reacted to bearish supply projections, a stronger dollar, and surprise inventory builds. OPEC+ increased output by 137,000 barrels per day in November. This marks the eighth consecutive month of production increases. The EIA projects Brent will average $62.52 per barrel in Q4 2025, then drop to $55 per barrel in 2026. **The strategic question:** Can WTI hold $60? A break below $57 confirms bearish momentum. A close above $62 reopens upside. **China - The Demand Wildcard** China's oil demand is projected to peak in 2025 at 770 million tonnes. This is the inflection point. Crude imports are expected to increase by only 1% in 2025. Electric vehicles, LNG trucks, and high-speed rail are eroding transportation fuel demand. For crude markets, this means the era of demand-driven price support is ending. **Natural Gas - Structural Strength** Natural gas is a different story. Henry Hub spot prices are projected to average $3.90 per MMBtu during winter months. The EIA expects prices to average $4.00 per MMBtu in 2026, 16% higher than 2025. Why? U.S. LNG exports are expected to reach 14.9 billion cubic feet per day in 2025, a 25% increase from 2024. Storage levels are healthy at 3,960 Bcf, 4% above the five-year average. Natural gas is benefiting from structural demand while crude faces structural headwinds. **Strategic Positioning** Here's the playbook: **Crude:** Defensive. Watch the $60 level on WTI. A break below $57 opens downside to $55. **Natural gas:** Constructive. Winter demand and LNG export growth support prices. The $3.50–$4.00 range is the new baseline. **The divergence trade:** Long natural gas, short crude. This is a structural shift. **Catalyst Watch** This week: EIA inventory reports on Thursday. Watch for crude builds and gas draws. Next week: Thanksgiving holiday. Expect thin liquidity. December: OPEC+ meeting on December 1st. Will they pause production increases? **The Levels That Matter** WTI crude: Support at $57. Resistance at $62. Natural gas: Support at $3.50. Resistance at $4.00. Brent crude: Support at $62. Resistance at $66. **Final Word** The $60 level on WTI is the battleground. Below it, we're looking at $55 crude by year-end. Above it, we get a relief rally into December. Natural gas is the structural winner. Position accordingly. For inquiries: [email protected]. Subject: Energy Capital. This is Energy Markets Daily. We'll see you Tuesday for Technicals.