Crude Oil: The Tape Isn’t Buying the Headlines
By Eli Levy, Senior Analyst & Series 3 Broker

Bottom Line
Top of Book
Markets hit midweek turbulence after another round of attacks in the Strait of Hormuz and word that the U.S./Iran ceasefire is off. Oil and Treasury yields rose, and the VIX nearly touched 19 on Wednesday before drifting back to 15.25 today. But crude never confirmed the panic — August WTI was last seen down $0.49 at $71.59/barrel, and Brent’s brief run above $80 didn’t stick. The distance between the headlines and the price is the week in a sentence.
The Argument
Both Sides of the Tape
The Bull Case
If oil stays contained, the geopolitics stay background noise and the market gets to focus on what actually moves multiples: the economy and Q2 earnings, which start next week. The Street is looking for 23.3% year-over-year growth for the S&P 500 — though it’s worth noting the median company only needs to clear roughly 9%, a far more forgiving bar than the headline number implies.
The tape is behaving like it expects to be rewarded: the S&P 500 is on track for a three-week closing high, and the Equal Weight index bounced firmly off its 20-day SMA, which says the strength isn’t just a handful of megacaps. Financials, healthcare, and industrials are printing new weekly highs. July seasonality has historically been supportive, and a good earnings season would give the fundamental story something to stand on.
Notably, the most constructive argument this week wasn’t about AI at all — it was that the second half offers catch-up trades and overlooked areas precisely because so many expect returns to moderate.
The Bear Case
The longer the conflict runs, the higher the odds oil eventually grinds higher — and higher oil complicates inflation at the exact moment the market wants the Fed sidelined. Both sides say indirect talks continue, but after this week’s exchange, the odds of near-term normalization in the Strait look poor.
Then there’s positioning. Hedge fund gross and net exposure sits near the 97th percentile, retail margin debt, fund leverage, and leveraged ETF assets are all building at once, and quarter-end pension rebalancing points to mechanical selling. None of that is a sell signal on its own, but it’s the kind of structure that turns ordinary pullbacks into sharp ones. And semis still have to prove themselves.
The SOX bounced off its 50-day SMA, but it was choppy, not a clean “V” off support. Notably, funds sold tech at a record pace this week while parts of the Street were buying chips into the reset — a real disagreement, not a technicality.
The Two Arguments Worth Watching…..
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