API report

The Commodities Feed: Middle distillates firm up

US economic data proved supportive for crude prices yesterday by signalling that the Federal Reserve could now be nearing the end of its rate hiking cycle. Today's calendar is fairly quiet, with just the usual EIA inventory numbers to note.

 

Energy – $80/bbl remains in play for Brent

Bad news still appears to be good news when it comes to US economic data. US retail sales for June came in below market expectations, whilst industrial production came in much weaker than anticipated. While this will do little to change expectations for a Federal Reserve rate hike next week, it does suggest that it could be the last of the hiking we see from the central bank, particularly following the softer than expected CPI release last week. Oil has reacted positively to the expectation that we are approaching the end of the hiking cycle. ICE Brent settled more than 1.4% higher yesterday, leaving the market in striking distance of the US$80/bbl

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Fed Chair's Dot Plots and Energy Reports: Unveiling Commodities' Reactions

Ed Moya Ed Moya 29.06.2023 08:24
Commodities were tested after Fed Chair Powell triple downed on the Fed’s dot plots.  The dollar initially caught a bid but that was short-lived.  At the end of the forum, traders really didn’t learn anything new.   Oil Before the EIA report, crude prices were wavering after a larger than expected drop in inventories, countered fears that several banks will be sending the global economy into recession. Yesterday, the API report showed crude stocks declined by 2.4m bpd. Energy traders however turned bullish quickly the EIA energy report showed a 9.6 million bpd draw and robust demand signs everywhere.  US crude exports rose above the 5 million bpd level, jet demand rose to highest level since 2019, and the 4-week average gasoline demand surged to the best levels since December 2021.  The oil outlook was too pessimistic and this report reset the market.   Gold Gold remains in the house of pain, falling to a 3-month low as investors grapple with FOMO and as central banks send global bond yields higher. The peak of tightening cycles keeps getting pushed higher and that has been bad news for gold. Gold did not get any favors from Fed Chair Powell as the pushback of more tightening saw rate cut bets pushed deeper into next year.  The precious metal also got some hawkish signals from the ECB and BOE, while the BOJ noted that there are signs inflation will pick up next year and that the BOJ is ready to shift policy, potentially even as soon as this year. All eyes are on gold’s $1900 level, as a breach could trigger some technical selling.  Gold is above where it was trading before the ECB forum, so it might continue to stabilize here.  
The Commodities Feed: Middle Distillates Firm Up as Crude Prices Respond to US Economic Data

The Commodities Feed: Middle Distillates Firm Up as Crude Prices Respond to US Economic Data

ING Economics ING Economics 19.07.2023 09:59
The Commodities Feed: Middle distillates firm up US economic data proved supportive for crude prices yesterday by signalling that the Federal Reserve could now be nearing the end of its rate hiking cycle. Today's calendar is fairly quiet, with just the usual EIA inventory numbers to note.   Energy – $80/bbl remains in play for Brent Bad news still appears to be good news when it comes to US economic data. US retail sales for June came in below market expectations, whilst industrial production came in much weaker than anticipated. While this will do little to change expectations for a Federal Reserve rate hike next week, it does suggest that it could be the last of the hiking we see from the central bank, particularly following the softer than expected CPI release last week. Oil has reacted positively to the expectation that we are approaching the end of the hiking cycle. ICE Brent settled more than 1.4% higher yesterday, leaving the market in striking distance of the US$80/bbl level. Given the tightening that we expect in the oil market as we move through the second half of this year, we believe it is only a matter of time before Brent moves above US$80/bbl. How convincing this move will be will really depend on whether we see a big shift in speculative sentiment. Whilst we have seen an increase in speculative buying in recent weeks, historically it is still fairly modest, particularly when you consider the tightening that is expected in the physical market US inventory numbers released overnight from the API show that there were draws across the board over the last week. Crude oil inventories fell by 797Mbbls, which was less than the roughly 2.5MMbbls decline the market was expecting. Crude stocks at Cushing fell by 3MMbbls, while gasoline and distillate inventories declined by 2.8MMbbls and 100Mbbls respectively. Overall, the numbers were fairly neutral. The more widely followed Energy Information Administration (EIA) report will be released later today. The middle distillate market remains well supported with the prompt ICE gasoil time spread trading at more than a US$4/t backwardation, whilst the prompt ICE gasoil crack has strengthened to more than US$22/bbl. There has been revived speculative interest in middle distillates recently, with speculators buying almost 23k lots of ICE gasoil over the last reporting week to leave them with a net long just shy of 33k lots. This buying has been driven by a combination of fresh longs as well as short covering. Since early May, speculators have bought more than 65k lots in ICE gasoil. Clearly, sentiment in the market has shifted quite drastically, and this is not too surprising when looking at the drawdown in ARA gasoil inventories in recent weeks. Insights Global data shows that gasoil inventories in ARA have fallen by 577kt since mid-May, leaving stocks at 1.93mt- 16% below the 5-year average. The second batch of Chinese trade data for June was released yesterday, which showed strong exports for gasoline and jet fuel with refiners having increased run rates (up 11% year-on-year). Gasoline exports in June increased 30.7% YoY to 950kt, which takes year-to-date exports to 6.17mt, up 10.9% YoY. Meanwhile, jet fuel exports grew by more than 109% YoY to 1.08mt in June, leaving year-to-date exports at 6.74mt, an increase of 57.3% YoY. Diesel exports over the month were weaker, falling 12.4% YoY to 290kt. However, year-to-date diesel exports are still very strong, up more than 263% YoY to a total of 7.49mt. The latest China trade data also shows that LNG imports in June totalled 5.96mt, up 24% YoY – and this is after imports in May grew 30% YoY. Stronger imports in recent months have made up for the weaker flows seen earlier in the year. As a result, cumulative LNG imports over the first six months of the year totalled 33.62mt, up a little more than 7% YoY. This still leaves us below the roughly 10% import demand growth we were expecting for the year as a whole. China is still very quiet in the spot market, and it appears that term contract volumes are adequate to meet domestic demand. We would likely need to see a recovery in Chinese industrial production before we see stronger LNG demand, as industrial demand makes up the bulk of Chinese natural gas demand.

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