Crude oil markets reversed sharply lower during the week of April 5 through April 9, 2026, as traders shifted from aggressive risk pricing to rapid liquidation.
After surging the previous week on geopolitical tensions, May WTI crude failed to sustain higher levels and entered a wide, volatile range. Prices reached a weekly high of $117.73 before collapsing to a low of $91.05. As of Thursday, crude is trading at $98.39, down $13.15 or -11.79% for the week so far.
This sharp reversal follows last week’s breakout rally, where supply fears tied to Middle East tensions drove prices higher. The current price action suggests that traders are now reassessing those risks while locking in profits after an extended move.
Profit-Taking and Position Liquidation Drive Sharp Selloff
The dominant theme this week has been aggressive profit-taking after last week’s nearly 12% rally. Markets that move too far, too fast often face sharp corrections, and crude oil is showing that pattern clearly.
Traders who bought into the geopolitical premium began exiting positions as no immediate supply disruption materialized. While tensions remain elevated, the absence of confirmed outages or shipping interruptions reduced the urgency to hold long positions at elevated prices.
This type of move is typical in fast-moving commodity markets. Once upside momentum slows, large funds tend to unwind positions quickly, triggering a cascade of selling.
