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Breakout
A breakout occurs when price moves decisively beyond a previously well-respected support or resistance level and is often accompanied by increased volume and volatility. In crude and refined product futures, breakouts frequently follow major catalysts such as surprise inventory data, unplanned refinery outages, geopolitical shocks, or important macroeconomic announcements. Traders monitor key technical levels on flat price, time spreads, and crack spreads, because a breakout in any of these can signal a shift in underlying fundamentals or positioning. For example, a breakout in a gasoline crack spread might indicate a sudden tightening in product supply even if crude remains range-bound. Many trading strategies look to enter positions only when a breakout confirms direction, attempting to ride the resulting trend. However, false breakouts are common, so traders often combine technical signals with order-book behaviour and fundamental analysis. Understanding breakouts helps energy traders recognise when markets are transitioning from range-bound to trending regimes and adjust risk accordingly.