Oil Just Spiked 35%: Ride It or Fade It?
Oil's 35% weekly spike has put crude above the psychological $90 mark, forcing traders to decide whether this is the start of a new uptrend or a blow-off move that unwinds just as quickly.
- USO is blasting higher. See the chart and price action here.
Oil Prices Explode
- The move is being driven by a severe supply shock, with the Strait of Hormuz effectively shut and Middle East output and refining capacity disrupted.
- WTI and Brent have ripped to multi‑month highs as traders price in prolonged supply risk, pushing front‑month futures and oil‑linked ETFs sharply higher.
The United States Oil Fund (NYSE:USO) tracks front-month WTI futures, giving investors a liquid way to express a directional call on crude without trading futures directly.
A sustained move above $90 would likely reflect ongoing supply tightness and resilient demand, while a quick reversal would suggest a speculative overshoot.
How USO, UCO, SCO Work
USO seeks to reflect daily moves in spot WTI via near-dated futures and monthly rolls, making it sensitive to both price swings and curve structure.
ProShares Ultra Bloomberg Crude Oil (NYSE:UCO) targets 2x the daily performance of a WTI futures index, amplifying short-term gains and losses.
ProShares UltraShort Bloomberg Crude Oil (NYSE:SCO) delivers -2x the daily return of a similar crude index, effectively a leveraged short on oil.
If You See $90 As A New Base
For investors who believe 90-plus is the new floor and expect follow-through to higher highs, USO offers unlevered, simpler exposure suitable for multi-week holds.
More aggressive traders expecting near-term momentum and willing to monitor positions daily may favor UCO for a magnified upside trade, recognizing its long-run return drag and high volatility.
If You See A Fast Fade
If the spike looks like a classic blow-off that will mean-revert quickly, tactical bears can reach for SCO to express a high-octane short view on crude.
However, the combination of -2x leverage, daily resets and elevated implied volatility means SCO is generally a short-term trading vehicle, not a buy-and-hold hedge.
ETF Choice By View
| Oil view (near term) | Instrument | Rationale |
| New 90-dollar floor, moderate risk | USO | Unlevered crude exposure via front-month WTI futures |
| Strong upside momentum, high risk | UCO | 2x daily leverage for bulls expecting swift continuation |
| Spike will unwind, high risk | SCO | -2x daily inverse play for tactical bears |
Photo: FXQuadro / Shutterstock
Disclaimer: The content of this article solely reflects the author's opinion and does not represent the platform in any capacity. This article is not intended to serve as a reference for making investment decisions.
You may also like
Altcoins Eye 2x–4x Gains as PMI Turns Positive — 4 High-Momentum Trades to Watch
Bitcoin Mining Giants Ramp Up Sales as Prices Drop Sharply
Twenty-millionth Bitcoin Nears as Supply Tightens
The $200 Billion Dilemma: Has the Time Come for Amazon to Issue a Dividend?

