Extreme RSI readings have historically preceded 10-20% relief rallies in beaten-down energy names—Delek, Expand, and XCF just hit those levels.
Why RSI 30 Is the Energy Trader’s Green Flag
The Relative Strength Index measures how heavily sellers have pounded a stock over 14 trading days. Readings under 30 don’t guarantee a bottom, but in the energy patch they coincide with:
- Refinery margin rebounds when winter demand normalizes.
- Private-equity nibbles at midstream assets trading below replacement cost.
- Management buybacks announced within 30 days 62% of the time, Benzinga data show.
Delek US Holdings (NYSE:DK) – The Refinery Rout Is Priced In
Shares have dropped 9% in a month after JP Morgan cut its price target to $38, citing narrower Gulf Coast cracks. At $29.01 the stock now trades at 0.9× tangible book—cheaper than every U.S. refiner except PBF. An RSI of 29.9 matches the level that preceded a 22% two-week surge last March.
Expand Energy (NASDAQ:EXE) – Permian Driller With A Balance Sheet Buffer
UBS still likes the name, keeping a Buy and trimming the target only $4 to $150. Net-debt/EBITDA sits at 0.6× versus 1.3× for the peer group, giving EXE room to accelerate the $250 million buyback authorization that kicked off in Q4. RSI 28.7 is the lowest since the 2020 COVID crash; the stock has averaged a 14% bounce in the month following sub-30 prints.
XCF Global (NASDAQ:SAFX) – The Ultimate Lotto Ticket
A 65% monthly collapse and a 187 million-share shelf filing hammered the micro-cap down to $0.14. Yet the registration is largely secondary—no new debt—and daily volume has tripled, hinting at bottom-fishers. With RSI at 21.4, even a return to the 50-day moving average implies 40% upside, though dilution risk remains extreme.
How to Play It Without Catching a Falling Knife
- Scale in thirds: buy one-third at current RSI, one-third if price closes above the 5-day EMA, final third on a volume-backed move above the 20-day.
- Use the 52-week low as a hard stop—$11.02 for DK, $91.02 for EXE, $0.12 for SAFX.
- Pair-trade: long the oversold name, short an equal dollar amount of the Energy Select Sector SPDR to isolate company-specific alpha.
Bottom Line
Energy oversold clusters have generated an average 16% rebound over the following quarter since 2015. DK offers the safest balance-sheet bet, EXE gives pure-play Permian torque, and SAFX is a high-beta coin flip. Risk-tolerant traders now have a rare January setup where momentum, valuation, and seasonality align.
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