WTI Extends Losses After Surprise Crude Build

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WTI Extends Losses After Surprise Crude Build

Oil prices tumbled today, leaving WTI back below $60 after OPEC+ headlines suggested “the market could handle more barrels” and a broad equity market sell-off didn’t help.

“We have come a long way from a year ago,” OPEC chief Mohammad Barkindo said.

“The days of GDP and oil demand figures being in the red because of the pandemic-induced shock appear to be behind us.”

Sounds a little optimistic. This week’s inventory data will likely be extremely noisy, dominated by the turmoil in Texas.

API

  • Crude +735k (-1.805mm exp)

  • Cushing +732k

  • Gasoline -9.993mm (-2.125mm exp) – biggest draw ever

  • Distillates -9.053mm (-2.90mm exp) – biggest draw since Jan 2003

Huge product draws suggest demand but with refineries largely shut-in due to Texas, inventories were crushed to meet what demand there was elsewhere. Crude stocks surprisingly rose (again no demand from refiners)

Source: Bloomberg

WTI extended its losses after the surprise crude build…

“Prices were getting elevated enough that stabilizing the market makes sense,” said Bill O’Grady, executive vice president at Confluence Investment Management in St. Louis.

“It is a difference between what was expected and what was hoped. What you expect is that they will raise production, what you hope is that they don’t.”

Finally, we note the timing of OPEC+’s potential move to slow the rise comes as US gas prices (at the pump) head up towards $3.00…

Source: Bloomberg

And, coincidentally, gas prices have soared 30% in the last 3 months – the last 7 times this pace of cost increase has occurred, gas prices have reversed dramatically…

Source: Bloomberg

“Gas prices are coming into the month of March like a lion.. and might end up leaving the same way,” GasBuddy’s oil and refined products analyst Patrick de Haan says

If OPEC+ decides this week to put more oil back to the market, it could cool off the rally in crude prices and, consequently, the continued rise in U.S. gasoline prices with the summer driving season approaching, Matt Egan at CNN Business argues.

Tyler Durden
Tue, 03/02/2021 – 16:37


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