Where next for the XLE?

While the energy sector continues to outperform on a YTD basis the past week has seen the sector fall back along with almost all the sectors as markets look to end the week in the red. There are, of course, any number of ongoing risk scenarios for this but the event that has been singled out as causing the latest swoon is Jay Powell’s comments that a half percent rise in interest rates is ‘on the table’ for the May meeting.

However, given the strength of the energy sector as reflected in the XLE, I thought this would be a good time to consider the charts from a volume price analysis perspective to see whether the sector has reached a technical pause point or whether a deeper correction is on the horizon. And for this we need to consider the vpa picture in the slower timeframes.

The first chart I want to consider is the daily where we can see clearly the climb higher in the index here I have also drawn in some trend lines as I wanted to capture the price channel and highlight how volume not only validates the price action but can also help to confirm whether the trend is likely to continue higher at significant support levels and zones. The down candle we see on the chart is the result of Jay Powell’s comments since when markets have continued to fall heavily. For the XLE this has meant the price action moving towards the volume point of control which sits at the 76 region which is where it has paused at the time of writing and which is also a strong support level.

Moving to the weekly chart the trend higher is even more pronounced and once again we have strong volume coming in at the intersection/confluence of the trend line, the volume point of control, and the Camarilla pivots but it will be the volume at the close that will determine whether the current pullback turns into a full-blown reversal.

But it is the monthly chart that is the most interesting from a vpa perspective which I have annotated accordingly and is self-explanatory.

In summary, this is the current technical picture for the XLE to which we should also add some fundamental points to see if they will influence whether the XLE breaks high and hold above that obstinate $80 level. First, is increasing inflation going to keep driving the XLE higher as the energy sector often does well in an inflationary environment and is also used as a hedge? Second, given the heavy weighting of oil producers in the XLE will the proposed increase of supply in May by OPEC along with the release of 1m barrels a day of oil from the US Strategic Reserve cap or reduce gas and energy costs thereby easing the inflation burden for consumers. Third, the lack of progress higher may be that traders and investors are simply on the sidelines waiting to see whether this additional supply has the desired effect.

By Anna Coulling

The indicators featured are my own and available from http://www.quantumtrading.com Charts are courtesy of Ninjatrader.

 

About Anna 2009 Articles
Hi – my name is Anna Coulling and I am a full time currency, commodities and equities trader. I have been involved in both trading and investing for over fifteen years and have traded many different financial instruments, from options and futures to stocks and commodities. I write and publish articles ( mostly for free ) for UK and international publications on a wide variety of financial issues, and in particular I enjoy helping others learn how to invest and trade.

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