I'll add a few comments which you might consider as you ponder whether now is a good time to make your move in oil. And also, if you have an intermediate term outlook, and you're of the philosophy that all boats respond to the tide. The first point is that corporate earnings seem to be putting in a top, and that is one of the most reliable harbingers of a recession. Then, we in the U.S., are coming into an election year, and Central Banks, by tradition, have not been unfriendly to the administration when going into a re-election campaign. The result in the past has been to delay the inevitable, and make the inevitable a little worse when it finally arrives. (The last interest rate reduction by the Greenspan led Fed going into the W. Bush re-election campaign is widely seen as unwise and unjustified based on the economy and the S&P, which was rising at the time.) Another point: the authoritarian monarchy (ruthless actually) in Saudi Arabia is not to be counted on for accurate information. That might work in your favor!
If you take into account compounded inflation (a primary driver of the market's ceaseless long-range upward trend) and real productivity growth you can get a quite accurate picture of where the S&P is likely to correct to when we eventually get into a recession and market excesses are wrung out. These periodic corrections are resets of the market to take it to where it actually should be based on inflation and real growth, and prepare it for the next round of "irrational exuberance" which invariably takes the market much higher than can be justified on the basis of current earnings, which we rationalize by saying the market is reflecting future earnings.