Oil may be near its peak if historical patterns hold true, CNBC’s Jim Cramer said Tuesday.
The commodity climbed to new multi-year highs Tuesday amid supply shortages and strong demand. Brent crude futures settled above $86 and U.S. benchmark West Texas Intermediate crude futures settled above $84, each the highest since 2014.
“There’s a widespread sense that inflation will continue endlessly, that the oil move is unstoppable,” Cramer said. “However, some of the smartest people I know are already seeing signs that crude could be nearing a top. They think this oil rally could be on its last legs.”
When open interest rises but commercial hedgers are lighting their load, that signals oil is close to a peak, according to Williams. It means more contracts are being opened, but new buyers are probably speculators rather than players involved in the industry.
That pattern happened throughout 2012 and 2014 when oil prices peaked — and appears on track in 2021.
Still, Williams noted oil is continuing to trend higher and doesn’t expect prices to peak immediately.
Reference: CNBC