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US EIA Weekly Report

This report reviews the key data from the US EIA’s Weekly Petroleum Status Report

OECD Oil Inventories held by industry

The report covers oil inventory data in the OECD held by industry in million barrels and days of forward demand, as provided by the International Energy Agency

Onyx CFTC Style COT Reports – 16 Sep 2024

Onyx’s in-house CTA positioning model determines the net positioning of CTAs in a range of futures benchmarks. This past week saw positioning turn more short across crude oil and refined product futures. CTA positioning in Brent and WTI futures fell by 9.80% and 3.65%, respectively, to around -50k and -40k lots on 16 Sep – testing previous “max short” levels for both contracts. At this level, CTAs are at a prime spot to retrace upwards from this extreme positioning. Similarly, we saw CTA positions in gasoil and heating oil decline by 9.85% and 7.90% w/w to -44k lots and -42k lots on 16 Sep. Finally, RBOB futures saw CTA positioning decline by 9.8% to nearly -50k lots, just shy of the eight-year low of -54.5k lots.

Brent Forecast: 16th September 2024

Is $70/bbl the new $80/bbl? The Nov ’24 Brent futures witnessed a tumultuous last week, briefly falling below $70/bbl for the first time in three years before finding support here. While the benchmark crude oil futures contract remains above this

COT Report: Bears, Bears Everywhere

The oil market saw a full capitulation this week as Brent futures fell below $70/bbl for the first time since December 2021. Gasoil continues to struggle, while gasoline found a wind of strength off the back of Hurricane Francine. Even though trading volumes are down with key traders enjoy the APPEC festivities, the show in oil swaps must go on.

Onyx CFTC Style COT Reports – 09 Sep 2024

Onyx’s in-house CTA positioning model determines the net positioning of CTAs in a range of futures benchmarks. This past week continued to see net positioning grow shorter in crude and oil products. Brent futures saw net positioning decline by 106% w.w to -45.6mb on 09 Sep, while net positioning in WTI futures declined by 124% to 38.4mb on 09 Sep – the lowest net positioning has been for the benchmark crude futures YTD.

Brent Forecast: 9th September 2024

Brent crude futures saw a significant sell-off last week amid a weakening economic backdrop despite OPEC’s plans to delay its production hikes. The Nov’24 contract has stabilised at the $72/bbl level as of 09:00 BST (time of writing). While we

Weekly Oil Inventories Report

This report reviews weekly oil inventory data from the US EIA’s Weekly Petroleum Status Report, Global Insights’ ARA Independent Storage and International Enterprise’s Singapore product storage

US EIA Weekly Report

This report reviews the key data from the US EIA’s Weekly Petroleum Status Report

COT Report: My Bear Lady

Polarising strength in European gasoline and naphtha continues to define lightends. Meanwhile, there has been a dramatic reversal in the North Sea market, with the physical window seeing substantial selling on 3 Sep due to a variety of players offering WTI Midland.

Onyx Futures CFTC COT Report – 02 Sep 2024

The recent futures rally did not garner a significant increase in CTA net positions with the bullish momentum short-lived. Net positions peaked at -108k lots, which was lower than the previous peak of -74k lots on 16 Aug. Both increases began from -150k lots. For the individual products, RBOB futures is the most bearish at -32.9k lots, while WTI futures is the least bearish at -16.9k lots. 

Brent Forecast: 2nd September 2024

Show Me the Demand! The Nov’24 Brent futures contract was trading at around $77.05/bbl at 09:00 BST (time of writing), and we expect it to end the week trading between $75-78/bbl. Amid the varying factors impacting the benchmark crude futures,

Weekly Oil Inventories Report

This report reviews weekly oil inventory data from the US EIA’s Weekly Petroleum Status Report, Global Insights’ ARA Independent Storage and International Enterprise’s Singapore product storage

COT Report: All’s Bear in Love and War

Polarising strength in European gasoline and naphtha continues to define lightends. Meanwhile, the North Sea and VLSFO have been among the few bright spots in the oil swaps market.

See all the updates across the barrel in this week’s Onyx Commitment of Traders report, as well as six contracts to watch for the week ahead. Click on the relevant button below to access your COT report.

US EIA Weekly Report

This report reviews the key data from the US EIA’s Weekly Petroleum Status Report

Onyx Futures CFTC COT Report – 27 Aug 2024

Onyx’s in-house CTA positioning model determines the net positioning of CTAs in a range of futures benchmarks. Total net positioning fell to its lows on 7 August down to -150k lots which was the lowest level since the beginning of June, during the post-OPEC meeting sell-off. With sentiment improving and bearish positioning becoming overcrowded, net positioning has rebounded since, rising to -113k lots by 12 August.

Brent Forecast: 26th August 2024

We expect Nov’24 Brent futures to end the week trading between $78/bbl and $82.00/bbl in what continues to be a range-bound market, albeit the range is likely to be slightly wider than in recent weeks. Given the excitement around the

Weekly Oil Inventories Report

This report reviews weekly oil inventory data from the US EIA’s Weekly Petroleum Status Report, Global Insights’ ARA Independent Storage and International Enterprise’s Singapore product storage

The Officials: Brent’s on the rebound

22 August 2024: 16:30 BST Vitol made Equinor’s dreams come true in the North Sea, with the Nordics finally selling a Sep 11-13 JohanSverdrup at Dated -95c. They’ve been trying to shift the medium sour for days. One could say

The Officials: Dead cat bounce gets Kennie again

21 August 2024: 16:30 BST In ‘The Officials’, Onyx Capital Advisory publishes outright values, spreads, cracks and boxes for the main energy commodities traded in the marketplace. The published values are determined independently and on a fair market basis by

COT Report: Make Sing 0.5 Fuel Oil Great Again

Brent Futures is not the only contract that is capitulating this week as European gasoline falls at an even faster rate. Meanwhile, the Sing 0.5% marine fuel complex has been one of the few bright spots in the oil swaps market. See all the updates across the barrel in this week’s Onyx Commitment of Traders report, as well as six contracts to watch for the week ahead. Click on the relevant button below to access your COT report.

US EIA Weekly Report

This report reviews the key data from the US EIA’s Weekly Petroleum Status Report

The Officials: Vitol keeps Dubai premiums afloat

21 August 2024: 09:30 BST In ‘The Officials’, Onyx Capital Advisory publishes outright values, spreads, cracks and boxes for the main energy commodities traded in the marketplace. The published values are determined independently and on a fair market basis by

Brent Forecast: 19th August 2024

Although Brent crude futures saw a solid start last week, price action closed below $80/bbl on Friday. Middle East geopolitical concerns have eased alongside poor Chinese demand sentiment, amid weaker-than-expected economic data. The Oct’24 contract is trading at $79/bbl as

Onyx Futures CFTC COT Report – 19 Aug 2024

Onyx’s in-house CTA positioning model determines the net positioning of CTAs in a range of futures benchmarks. Total net positioning fell to its lows on 7 August down to -150k lots which was the lowest level since the beginning of June, during the post-OPEC meeting sell-off. With sentiment improving and bearish positioning becoming overcrowded, net positioning has rebounded since, rising to -113k lots by 12 August.

Daily Trade Idea: 19/08/2024

Long Sep 3.5 barges cracks With less volumes of HSFO coming into Northwest Europe from the US, the recent tightness has seen prices rise. We are following the trend with this trade. 

Edge Updates

The Officials: Bouncy ride ahead of Powell’s proclamation

Today is the day. It’s D-Day for the Fed and our resident macroeconomic enthusiast has been counting down the days like a nine-year-old excitedly opening his advent calendar in the lead up to Christmas. Hey it is money, real money. We all want some of it even if it’s fake recently printed paper money. The 25-50 debate will finally be settled when Power Powell unleashes the full force of the US economy, unshackling it from its restraints. The world needs decisive action from the big dawg. The market seemed nervous today, hesitant to jump for joy at a big cut, as though it was scared to be let down. Yesterday it seemed it was forecasting a nice cut but today the behaviour was desultory. Continuing fall out front the pager blow outs has not impacted the market even though the mighty Houthis have now threatened any Taiwanese ship in addition to those linked to Israel. The world keeps getting gummed up due to military and economic fights. Time to sit down folks and recognize no side can truly win.

European Window: Brent Volatile At $73.15/bbl Ahead Of Fed Rate Cut

The Nov’24 Brent Futures contract was volatile this afternoon, trading at $72.77/bbl at 12:00 BST and oscillating up to a high of $73.85/bbl around 16:20 BST before correcting to the $73.15/bbl handle by 17:00 BST (time of writing). This volatility could be attributed to market players adjusting their positions, both in cautious anticipation of the US Fed rate cut this evening and in reaction to EIA data for the week ending 13 Sep, showing that US crude oil inventories fell by 1.63 mb and production was down by 100 kb/d. According to a Reuters poll, analysts had predicted a 500 kb decline in US crude inventories, indicating that last week’s Hurricane Francine may have caused a greater drawdown than expected. In the news today, Bloomberg has estimated that Russian crude oil revenues have dropped by 30% since June, largely due to international benchmark prices falling and depressing the value of cheap Russian crude. This decline in Russian crude comes despite the fact the country’s oil exports averaged 3.21 mb/d for the four weeks leading up to 15 Sep, 80 kb/d higher than the four-week average to the week of 8 Sep. In other news, as the market becoming increasingly divided on the Fed action, former Cleveland Fed President Mester has said today she favours a series of 25 bps cuts rather than a 50 bps cut. Whilst Fed funds futures predicted a 61% chance of a 50 bps cut, major brokerages now expect a 25 bps cut including Goldman Sachs, Nomura, and Deutsche Bank. Whichever move the Fed makes at 19:00 BST, either cut will likely cause further volatility in crude prices. At the time of writing, the front month (Nov/Dec’24) and six-month (Nov/May’25) Brent futures spreads are at $0.76/bbl and $1.78/bbl, respectively.

The Officials: Premiums push on

Physical Dubai markets are holding strong, with Dubai partials pricing 52c over Brent, and today they set yet another record for the highest physical premium we have tracked since starting the Officials at the beginning of June at $2.26/bbl! These are expensive barrels, and with demand so rock bottom in Asia that some refineries are filing for bankruptcy, we ask what is driving this strength in Asia. Reliance was more active on the sell side in the window today, alongside Exxon. It smells like more run cuts in Asia to us, but who knows? The regulars were on the buyside, with Mets hungry as ever, netting themselves two convergences. One Al Shaheen from Exxon, and another Upper Zakum from Reliance. It’s like last orders at the pub, with that one drinker keeping on about ‘just one more’ to the bartender. NPI and Vitol also picked up a couple partials.

Overnight & Singapore Window: Brent Drops Down To $72.65/bbl Handle

Nov’24 Brent Futures flat price declined this morning from $73.27/bbl at 07:00 BST down to $72.65/bbl handles at 11:20 BST (time of writing). Crude prices fell alongside API estimates showing an unexpected increase of 1.96 mb in US crude oil inventories on Tuesday. This weakness came in spite of bullish factors including escalation of conflict in the Middle East and the potential for a 50-basis point Fed cut to stimulate US economic growth. In the news today, the explosive pagers used against Hezbollah in yesterday’s bombing in Lebanon were alleged to have been modified by Israel’s Mossad spy agency at the production level. A Lebanese security source told Reuters that up to 3kg of plastic explosives were hidden in the 5,000 Gold Apollo brand pagers ordered by Hezbollah. The group has communicated via Telegram today that they intend to retaliate against the Israeli attacks. In other news, US Gulf Coast oil shut-ins have dropped to 102 kb/d as output recovers after Hurricane Francine dissipated on 14 Sep. The US is also seeking to increase their SPR by 6 mb of crude amid relatively low oil prices. Finally, Russia could hold off oil export cuts in October due to domestic refineries maintenance, as per Reuters. Furthermore, Indian Oil Minister Hardeep Singh Puri has stated that India will not change its energy policy to buy oil from the cheapest supplier, indicating that India will continue to buy cheap Russian crude oil. At the time of writing, the front month (Nov/Dec’24) and six-month (Nov/May’25) Brent futures spreads are at $0.69/bbl and $1.61/bbl, respectively.

European Window: Brent Rallies To $74.20/bbl

Nov’24 Brent Futures flat price rallied from $72.59/bbl at 12:00 BST up to $74.20/bbl handles at 17:45 BST (time of writing). In the news today, Venezuela’s largest oil refinery, the Amuay refinery, has been reported as offline since 12 Sep due to a power failure, according to Reuters. The refining facility has a capacity to process 645 kb/d and suffers frequent power outages due to a chronic lack of investment. In other news, two Chinese refineries, Zhenghe Group and Shandon Huaxing Petrochemical Group, were declared bankrupt today after creditors failed to agree on restructuring plans for the refineries, as stated by Bloomberg. The processing units at these plants have not been operational for several months due to refinery margins plunging, particularly in Shandong. Finally, South Sudan’s President Salva Kiir has agreed with the leader of Sudan, Gen Abdel Fattah al-Burhan, to export crude oil via Sudan, following months of disrupted supply due to a damaged pipeline network amid civil war in Sudan. At the time of writing, the front month (Nov/Dec’24) and six-month (Nov/May’25) Brent futures spreads are at $0.72/bbl and $1.82/bbl, respectively.

The Officials: Fed up with these high rates

All eyes are on tomorrow’s FED decision on the 25 or 50 bps interest rate cut. In the meantime, iPhone warriors fight in all economic arenas about the size while having zero influence on the outcome. In other words, it is all words and we’re all talkers. But what does 25 or 50 bps mean for markets? If the Fed cuts the full 50 it’d be happy times as the immediate effect is lowering of business and mortgage cost. One could argue this is not bullish, as the FED had to go big. But those are fine details for the bearded pipe smokers. The average Joe will love Powell.

Dated Brent Report – Any Last Sellers?

September has been a month of many firsts in Brent futures: for one, the benchmark crude futures contract collapsed below $70/bbl on 10 Sep for the first time in three years. Soon after this feat, ICE COT data for the week ending 10 Sep reported that players were net short the Brent futures complex for the first time on record. Despite this weakness, Dated Brent and Dated differentials were shielded from the bears, with the physical differential briefly dropping to just above $0.99/bbl on 09 Sep to then rising to $1.275/bbl on 16 Sep. This relative support emerged due to strong buy-side forces present in the market. On 06 Sep, we saw Chevron offering WTI Midland across the curve, only for Totsa to lift the offer. Afterwards, we saw Gunvor and Petroineos buying Ekofisk and Midland cargoes, respectively, with BP and Glencore on the sell side.

Gasoline Report: Hurri-came and went…

The gasoline market has reached a bottom and has begun stabilising due in part to Hurricane Francine, which caused little damage, but the headline was enough to prompt some buying, it seems. Gasoline continued to drive poor sentiment in refinery margins in both regions, with only gasoil underperforming more. Two Sinochem oil refineries were declared bankrupt this week as the Sinochem Group indefinitely shut down two refineries in Shandong, China, due to high crude costs and weak fuel demand, which reflected poor margins and a sluggish economy. Unlike independent teapot refiners benefiting from discounted Russian, Iranian and Venezuelan crude, which, therefore, have been running at huge capacity, Sinochem faces higher costs, causing refinery utilization to hit a four-year low and a 2.3% decline in China’s crude imports in the first half of the year. Nov’24 RBBR reached a low of just above $7.00/bbl on 4 Sep and has strengthened to $9.00/bbl on 17 Sep. Will the market risk being long again after seeing such a risk-off month or two following the catastrophic start of the year (for some)?

The Officials: Mind the cracks

What is Mitsui, big buyers of Dubai partials, up to with all its oil, given Chinese teapots are dropping like flies as margins get crushed? An exaggeration we know but two teapots are down. The situation is awful and we are reminded by another data point. Vietnam’s exports of cement into China are down 90% as construction is flat on its back. Cement is very highly energy intensive and so is construction itself. You know where we are going with this…diesel is
impacted very negatively. The front month Arab Gulf 321 crack is creaking under the strain, down to $5.66/bbl from its February peak at $19.35/bbl! Dubai physical premiums continue to climb and are at the highest since ‘The Officials’ began tracking the data. Premiums are at $2.12, up by almost 10c from yesterday.

Overnight & Singapore Window: Brent Futures Drops to $72.50/bbl

Nov’24 Brent Futures flat price weakened this morning from $73.13/bbl at 07:00 BST to $72.50/bbl at 11:30 BST (time of writing). After last week’s upward trend, prices are relatively steady amid US output concerns, countering bearish sentiment caused by lagging Chinese demand. In the news today, Fed funds futures show markets are now pricing in a 69% chance that the US Federal Reserve will cut rates by 50 basis points, as per data by Reuters. A lower interest rate could potentially lift oil demand by supporting economic growth. In other news, the UK government is intensifying its crackdown on the oil trading empire of Hossein Shamkhani, the son of an advisor to Ayatollah Khamenei, Supreme Leader of Iran. The UK is continuing to scrutinise the business practices of London-based Nest Wise Trading, owned by Shamkhani, and has warned Shamkhani’s company with immediate dissolution due to its role in trading both Iranian and Russian crude. This comes as part of a broader crackdown in the UK and US on entities believed to be evading oil-trading restrictions. Finally, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken is headed to Egypt today to prepare a proposal to present to Israel and Hamas for a cease-fire deal and release of hostages. Blinken, however, has no public plans to meet with Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu on the trip. The visit comes amid Israel threatening to escalate conflict against Hezbollah. At the time of writing, the front month (Nov/Dec’24) and six-month (Nov/May’25) Brent futures spreads are at $0.57/bbl and $1.41/bbl, respectively.

Onyx Alpha: Waiting for the DROP-J?

Another week brings another selection of new trade ideas from Onyx Research, this time looking at trades in Brent/Dubai, Eastern MOPJ naphtha, and Sing 92 gasoline swaps. 

European Window: Brent Climbs To $72.50/bbl

Nov’24 Brent Futures flat price climbed this afternoon from $71.76/bbl at 12:00 BST to $72.50/bbl at 17:25 BST (time of writing). The increase in crude prices comes as players wait and watch for further directional cues ahead of the Fed meeting on 18 Sep. The market is still hindered by bearish sentiment, however, amid demand worries in China and offline capacity in the Gulf of Mexico. In the news today, there has been much speculation as to whether the Fed will cut by 25 or 50 basis points. This will mark the first US interest rate cut since March 2020. Proponents of the view that the Fed will cut by 50 bps include Michael Feroli, analyst at JPMorgan, and Bill Dudley, the former New York Fed president and Bloomberg columnist. In contrast, Satyam Panday, chief US economist at S&P Global Ratings, foresees three cuts of 25 bps, one every Fed meeting for the rest of the year. Whichever way the Fed chooses to move on rates (25 or 50 bps), it is clear that the consensus is looking for a cut in the Sep/Nov and Dec meetings. In other news, in a note by Callum Bruce, Goldman Sachs has commented on oil price weakness, with Brent slipping below $70/bbl last week. Goldman Sachs claimed that Brent crude could recover to $77/bbl in Q4 ’24, on the condition that demand concerns abate, positioning and valuation recover, and OECD inventories remain somewhat below normal. However, their analysis also highlights the risk of comfortable inventory levels allowing the market to price in an expected 2025 supply surplus, potentially hampering recovery of crude prices. At the time of writing, the front month (Nov/Dec’24) and six-month (Nov/May’25) Brent futures spreads are at $0.60/bbl and $1.51/bbl, respectively.

The Officials: Forecasters’ Folly

The upper 60s came and went, with the initial negative narrative being overtaken by ‘it is not so bad and we are going to:’ 75, 77, 80 or even more. Take your pick. But the macros have not changed and, if anything, they are a wee bit worse and everything works at the margin. So be careful. In flat price the story has been pretty directionless to stronger. A random walk along the flat price chart saw a slow morning, before picking up steam into the early hours of US trading. According to traders, Exxon has been selling alongside Chevron, a Team America defector, and shortly before the window they may have got their way, with flat price and spreads both easing off. As flat price reached the day’s peak at $73.31/bbl, Brent front spreads peaked at 66c just after 15:00 BST, before shedding 8c to close the window at 58c. Further down the curve, little changed. But the short end remains strong. One trader said, “we are no way oversold or pricing below where we ought to be”, even despite the historic short positioning in managed money. But for every short, there is a long, so…

Futures Report: Breathing Room

The Nov’24 Brent futures fell below $70/bbl on 10 Sep, reaching lows not seen since December 2021, before recovering to around $73/bbl by September 16, despite an oversold RSI and declining open interest. Meanwhile, the US 2-year treasury yield and Brent broke key support levels following hawkish BOJ comments and political developments, with the OIS now pricing in a more aggressive US Fed interest rate cut, indicating a potential recession. ICE COT data for the week ending September 10 shows money managers turning bearish, reducing speculative longs by 19.7% and increasing shorts by 15.5%, resulting in net positioning in Brent futures turning negative for the first time and the long:short ratio dropping to 0.80:1.00 for all weeks to 2013.

CFTC Weekly: Sellers Dominate!

Money managers remained bearish in the benchmark crude oil futures over the week ending 10 Sep, most notably in Brent futures, with the front-month contract dipping below $70/bbl on 10 September.

The Officials: How short is too short?

It’s the positioning in Brent contracts that is really intriguing this morning. Managed money net length in Brent futures contracts, according to ICE COT, has turned negative, marking a historic shift in sentiment on the long/short seesaw. For the first time since the data began being collated, some of the shorts are outweighing the longs. The composition is clear with -33.7 mb net short for the week ending 10 Sep. Shorts look a bit saturated…

Overnight & Singapore Window: Brent Trades At $71.90/bbl

Nov’24 Brent Futures flat price found support this morning after a relatively quiet night, trading at $72.40/bbl at 07:00 BST before it saw resistance at $72.75/bbl around 10:50 BST and eased off to the $72.70/bbl level at 11:20 BST (time of writing). In the news today, the ECB has cut rates by 25 basis points, as was expected, for a second time in three months, to 3.5%. President Lagarde has said the ECB is determined to reach its inflation target of 2% over the medium term, however, has not yet specified an exact time frame for this goal. In other news, six Exxon and Shell refineries in Louisiana have resumed operation amid little significant damage from Hurricane Francine, as per Reuters. Production outages in the US Gulf Coast caused by the storm stood at 730 kb/d as of 12 Sep. Finally, Libya’s political factions have not reached a final deal on the central bank yet, the UN mission says. Sadiq al-Kabir, ousted governor of the Central Bank of Libya (CBL), told Reuters that international banks have suspended all transactions with Libya. At the time of writing, the front month (Nov/Dec’24) and six-month (Nov/May’25) Brent futures spreads are at $0.64/bbl and $1.63/bbl, respectively.

European Window: Brent Weakens To $72.26/bbl

Nov’24 Brent Futures flat price saw a volatile afternoon but ultimately weakened, trading at $72.67/bbl at 12:00 BST and spiking to $73.21/bbl at around 15:25 BST, followed by a descent to $72.26/bbl at 17:30 (time of writing). The sell-off may be attributed to traders not wanting to keep long positions over the weekend, in addition to key Louisiana terminals reopening following now-tropical storm Francine. In news today, the port of New Orleans and the Louisiana Offshore Oil Port are back online, according to the US Coast Guard. Texas ports have also started accepting and servicing tankers, as per vessel monitoring data from LSEG. Meanwhile, Shell stated today that production is ramping up at five of their platforms in the Gulf of Mexico, however, the Perdido, Auger and Enchilada/Salsa platforms will remain shut due to other unspecified downstream issues. In other news, Macquarie revealed in a Friday note that its forecast for Brent crude has lowered by $2/bbl to $80/bbl for the rest of 2024, seeing potential for a heavy surplus of oil in 2025. The bank’s prediction follows both OPEC and the IEA lowering their global oil demand forecast this week. Finally, a Gazprom Neft-owned Moscow oil refinery has resumed operations, after a drone attack on 1 Sep halted production at refining unit Euro+, according to Reuters. The Euro+ unit accounts for half of the facility’s total production, with a refining capacity of 6 million metric tons of oil per year. At the time of writing, the front month (Nov/Dec’24) and six-month (Nov/May’25) Brent futures spreads are at $0.59/bbl and $1.48/bbl, respectively.

The Officials: Brent survives a scare… for how long?

Flat price has largely shrugged off APPEC’s bearish consensus; the market was overly short, really. Flat price and spreads all gained through the backend of the week and traders reported that next week, they’re “not really seeing any selling”, but they followed up that the two subsequent weeks have lots of selling. In short, the market is backwardating. Let’s not understate this: implied diffs are $1.30 for next week, little changed from where we are now, but the week after, they’re pricing 80c!! The market is teetering on the clifftops, Kennie had better have his parachute. There’s still plenty of trading time, so who knows? Nobody…

LNG Market Report: Gone with the (Bullish) Wind

QatarEnergy’s joint venture, which aims to convert the Golden Pass LNG import terminal in Texas into a large-scale export facility, has requested a three-year extension from US authorities to complete the project by 30 November 2029

The Officials: Saudis bolster allocations to an embattled China

Saudi allocations to Chinese refiners for October have jumped. Before we get into the details note the increase is in sharp contrast with the output stability narrative by OPEC. Key question to Saudi Arabia: if you are not hiking production, why are you increasing allocations to your customers? According to sources, Unipec got 14.5 mb for October up from 11 mb for September. Rongsheng, the favourite of the bunch, remains the primary recipient, at an unchanged 16 mb. These two take the lion’s share of supply. Total allocation grew to 45.5 mb in October, from 43 mb in September, just shy of the 3 mb increase we expected. As we’ve been saying, China doesn’t need much crude to fulfil its ailing demand, so where is this all going?

Overnight & Singapore Window: Brent Finds Support At $72.70/bbl

Nov’24 Brent Futures flat price found support this morning after a relatively quiet night, trading at $72.40/bbl at 07:00 BST before it saw resistance at $72.75/bbl around 10:50 BST and eased off to the $72.70/bbl level at 11:20 BST (time of writing). In the news today, the ECB has cut rates by 25 basis points, as was expected, for a second time in three months, to 3.5%. President Lagarde has said the ECB is determined to reach its inflation target of 2% over the medium term, however, has not yet specified an exact time frame for this goal. In other news, six Exxon and Shell refineries in Louisiana have resumed operation amid little significant damage from Hurricane Francine, as per Reuters. Production outages in the US Gulf Coast caused by the storm stood at 730 kb/d as of 12 Sep. Finally, Libya’s political factions have not reached a final deal on the central bank yet, the UN mission says. Sadiq al-Kabir, ousted governor of the Central Bank of Libya (CBL), told Reuters that international banks have suspended all transactions with Libya. At the time of writing, the front month (Nov/Dec’24) and six-month (Nov/May’25) Brent futures spreads are at $0.64/bbl and $1.63/bbl, respectively.

European Window: Brent Strengthens To $72.28/bbl

Nov’24 Brent Futures flat price initially dipped this afternoon, decreasing from $71.72/bbl at 12:00 BST down to a low of $71.08/bbl at 14:55 BST, before sharply rallying up to the $72.28/bbl handle at 17:30 BST (time of writing). The increase in price may have been due to a combination of new speculative long positions alongside the liquidation of existing short positions and stronger sentiment in the physical market. In the news today, Saudi Arabia is set to boost crude oil exports to China in October by around 3 mb, as Chinese state refiners PetroChina and Sinopec have asked Saudi Arabia for more supply. This could be a sign of China’s propensity to stock up on commodities at lower prices, with Saudi Arabia having reduced the price of Arab Light to Asia by $0.70/bbl for October. In other news, Giovanni Staunovo, UBS analyst, stated in a note to clients that Hurricane Francine may have disrupted the supply of up to 1.5 mb of crude, amounting to 50,000 bpd. The category 2 hurricane has since weakened to a tropical storm, decreasing from wind speeds of 100mph down to sustained speeds of 35 mph. Finally, the Kremlin has begun a counteroffensive in the Kursk region as Russian soldiers attempt to push back Ukrainian forces, corroborated by President Zelenskyy. Meanwhile, Moscow’s troops have been steadily advancing through Eastern Ukraine, approaching the logistical hub of Pokrovsk. At the time of writing, the front month (Nov/Dec’24) and six-month (Nov/May’25) Brent futures spreads are at $0.55/bbl and $1.41/bbl, respectively.

Trader Meeting Notes: Summer of 69 (dollars per barrel)

Things that remind me of the 60s: tie-dye, flower crowns, the space race, psychedelics, and the front-month Brent futures contract. Bearish sentiment almost appeared omnipresent this week in Brent, with the prompt Nov’24 futures contract dipping below $70/bbl for the first time since December 2021

The Officials: Time to abandon the bearish bandwagon?

Blimey! Brent’s surge into the European close burst up beyond the last few days’ levels to carry us firmly back into the $72/bbl range. The bears went too deep into enemy territory and now they have to pay up! The super-short market will be feeling the pinch from this afternoon and we’re sure some will be kicking themselves for jumping on the bandwagon of $60 Brent too early.

The Officials: Will the bouncing cat land on his feet?

Nov Brent futures premium over Dubai partials has inverted in recent sessions, with Dubai, “oddly outperforming” according to one trader. Today Brent reclaimed some ground. Weak macros have failed to shake prompt strength out of Brent; front spread rose to 53c of backwardation. Consensus from APPEC was overwhelmingly negative, OPEC let a little air out of their ballooned demand forecast, and today the IEA revised down their demand forecast for 2024, it’s not a pretty picture. With very few trading months left for 2024 oil, where is the strength coming from?

Overnight & Singapore Window: Brent Rallies to $71.80/bbl Levels

The November Brent Futures contract has seen stronger price action this morning, reaching a peak around $71.86/bbl at 08:30 BST before retracing slightly and again rallying up to trade at $71.83/bbl at the time of writing (11:20 BST), as major producers extend production cuts and evacuations in the Gulf of Mexico. In recent developments, the US Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement (BSEE) reported that 46% of the Gulf of Mexico’s 371 manned platforms and 60% of personnel from five rigs have been evacuated, with four rigs moved off location due to Hurricane Francine. The loss of production amounts to approximately 675kb/d, and contributed to prices rising this morning, especially with Libyan production remaining largely offline but nonetheless despite bearish EIA data emerging yesterday. In other news, Saudi Aramco has signed additional agreements with China’s Rongsheng Petrochemical and Hengli Group, advancing talks on refining and petrochemical sector cooperation. Aramco signed a Development Framework Agreement with Rongsheng, exploring the joint development of Saudi Aramco Jubail Refinery Company (SASREF) and potential cross-investments. Rongsheng may acquire a 50% stake in SASREF, while Aramco could acquire 50% in Rongsheng’s Ningbo Zhongjin Petrochemical Co. Ltd. At the time of writing, the Nov/Dec and Nov/May’25 Brent spreads are at $0.55/bbl and $1.41/bbl, respectively.

CFTC Predictor: Bulls Ejected From Oil

In addition to our regular Monday CFTC COT analysis report, Onyx Insight will publish its own in-house CFTC COT forecast ahead of the official Friday report. The model forecasts changes in long and short positions using machine learning, utilising Onyx’s proprietary data.

The Officials: Gas struggles along the bumpy flat price road

The signals for emerging surplus are coming in. Everywhere you look the curve has flattened. From Dubai to the North Sea, benchmark grades are struggling to muster even the slightest backwardation. The flattening has been particularly acute in Brent. Yesterday time spreads down the curve dipped their toes into a bearish contango. At 76c, Dec/Dec spreads closed the weakest in over 3 years. Compared to three months ago structures are starkly different.

European Window: Brent Breaks Below $70 Again Before Recovering To $70.90/bbl

Nov’24 Brent Futures flat price initially declined this afternoon from $70.60/bbl at 12:00 BST down to a low of $69.06/bbl at 15:50 BST, testing the key psychological support level of $70/bbl again before rebounding up and touching $70.90/bbl at 17:40 BST (time of writing). The drop below $70/bbl likely triggered a sell-off as traders moved to minimize exposure to further downside risk. However, the swift recovery above $70/bbl may suggest strong buying interest at this critical level, with potential upside momentum. In the news today, EIA data for the week ending 06 Sep showed US crude inventories rose by 0.833 mb, below market expectations of a 1 mb rise, whilst US crude oil imports increased to 1.526 mb, compared to a 0.85mb draw over the previous week. According to Bloomberg, the increasing stockpile of US inventories has added to concerns about an oversupply of crude. In other news, Libya’s oil exports have plummeted to 194 kb/d, which is an 81% w/w decrease in exports, as per data by Reuters. The situation remains uncertain as the political standoff over control of the central bank continues between Libya’s rival governments. Finally, the National Hurricane Center has stated that Hurricane Francine is due to hit Louisiana this afternoon, with operations now suspended at Port Fourchon, a key energy services hub and supplier of equipment to offshore oil producers in the Gulf of Mexico. At the time of writing, the front month (Nov/Dec’24) and six-month (Nov/May’25) Brent futures spreads are at $0.45/bbl and $1.12/bbl, respectively.

LPG Report: Sleepy Bears and CP Bulls

International propane continued to see bullish interest this fortnight, although this strength was more reflected in spreads than in flat price, with the latter drifting lower in line with the weakness in crude. This strength in spreads was most pronounced in Saudi (CP) propane, with the Q4/Q1’25 CP propane spread climbing from $10.50/mt on 30 Aug to just shy of $20/mt on 10 Sep before easing off to $17.15/mt on 11 Sep (at the time of writing).

The Officials: From East to West, latitude across the curve

The signals for emerging surplus are coming in. Everywhere you look the curve has flattened. From Dubai to the North Sea, benchmark grades are struggling to muster even the slightest backwardation. The flattening has been particularly acute in Brent. Yesterday time spreads down the curve dipped their toes into a bearish contango. At 76c, Dec/Dec spreads closed the weakest in over 3 years. Compared to three months ago structures are starkly different.

Overnight & Singapore Window: Brent Rises to $70.60/bbl

The November Brent Futures contract has seen a stronger morning, steadily climbing to $70.84/bbl at the time of writing (11:20 BST) following the sharp sell-off yesterday, amid expectations that Hurricane Francine may disrupt oil and gas production in the Gulf of Mexico. We noted that Brent fell yesterday amid no visible changes in fundamentals as risk aversion gripped markets; this was evidenced in gold moving higher and bond yields declining markedly. In headlines, Exxon is planning to cut production at its 523 kb/d Baton Rouge refinery to 20% ahead of Francine’s expected landfall, as reported by Reuters.

The Officials: Sub 70 Brent sends Kennie into freefall

Traders were hoping for a quiet day going into the weekend but instead they got a comatose or nearly dead oil
market. At 15:00 BST Nov Brent stood at a consolidated $73.40/bbl, slightly above its level at yesterday’s close.
Then, however, markets went into freefall. Within the hour, Brent had toppled down by almost $2/bbl, to around
$71.50/bbl. Disastrous Canadian PMIs? Americans selling off? Or just the dour macros weighing down
everyone’s souls? And then in come the Saudis, slashing their monthly OSPs across the board for October
against the preceding month’s differentials. All grades into the Med and Northwest Europe received 80c cuts. In Asia, Arab Light and Medium took a 70c and 80c hits respectively, while Heavy was slapped with a full $1 cut.