Could you explain further what you see with QE and oil? As far as I'm concerned, both of those are knowns; QE will end November 1, and the world is now awash in over-developed, moderately-priced energy, both oil and gas, with no-one willing to curb production; and that's without touching the largest untapped fracking reserve (Monterrey formation in California). Not that I think continued reliance on fossil fuels is a good idea environmentally - but there are many decades of supply left. Prices can't get too much lower than $60-70 bbl; due to the cost of extraction of alot of this.
You never just give me the easy ones do you?
There are the issues with QE, most of us know it will end and needs to end, but we should also wonder how the markets are going to price it in. "In the September FOMC meeting, Yellen put the final nail in the QE coffin by confirming the money-printing would end in October."
This is what has happened since then... Let's suppose the recent oversold bounce can be attributed to the expectation that QE will be extended,
Dow Surges 400 Points After Fed's Bullard Prevents Plunge With QE4 Bluff. Recently, we've seen volatility ramp up, if the markets decided to throw a "I want my QE" temper tantrum" then I wouldn't be surprised to see some wild price swings until this QE issue gets priced in.
Then we have multiple issues with surplus oil production & the falling US Dollar. We know Saudi Arabia wants to flush oil prices down, some think this is to get US producers to shut down our shale production (not good for the US economy), while others think the US is using them as a proxy to hurt
Syria & Russia. The other point of view, if there is surplus oil, then this means the global economy is contracting, if this is the case, what more can we do that we haven't already? Conversely, at some point in time we may need to defend the dollar, much of the earnings our American stocks get, is based on the value of the dollar, too expensive and we'll be less competitive with our exports, too cheap and we'll lose profit on the currency conversion.
I don't purport to know how any of this will play out, I only know that it is getting priced in and I'm not certain what the outcome will be. The only thing I can do is trade what I see and be mindful of what is happening behind the scenes, while at the same time not letting the fear of those unknowns wreak havoc on my trading decisions.