ICE gasoil

The Commodities Feed: Oil fundamentals remain supportive

The oil market remains well supported on the back of constructive fundamentals, and Russia’s ban on diesel and gasoline exports also adds support. The calendar this week is looking fairly quiet.

 

Energy - Speculative appetite grows

The oil market has held relatively steady in recent days with tightness in the physical market coupled with Russia’s recent export ban on diesel and gasoline offset by a fairly hawkish FOMC meeting last week. As a result, Brent continues to hold above US$93/bbl. Speculators continue to become more constructive towards the market with the speculative net long in ICE Brent growing by 17,904 lots over the last reporting week to 265,531 lots as of last Tuesday. This is the largest net long speculators have held since March, and the increase over the week was predominantly driven by short covering. Similarly, speculators increased their net long in NYMEX WTI by 15,084 lots over the reporting week

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The Commodities Feed: Limited Upside in Oil Amidst Russia Instability and Falling US Rig Count

ING Economics ING Economics 26.06.2023 08:00
The Commodities Feed: The need for a risk premium The oil market has opened slightly stronger this morning and this is no surprise given recent developments in Russia. However, the failed move by the Wagner group suggests that any upside in prices will likely be limited.   Energy - Russia instability offers limited upside to oil It was shaping up to be an interesting opening for oil given developments in Russia towards the end of last week. However, the Wagner group's insurrection came to an end as quickly as it started thanks to a deal brokered by Belarus’ Lukashenko. As a result, oil has only seen limited gains so far in early morning trading today with ICE Brent up a little over 1%. While the immediate supply risks have disappeared, the market will likely have to start pricing in a larger risk premium for oil given the growing instability in Russia. How much of a risk premium will really depend on how the aftermath of the failed insurrection is dealt with. In the US, the oil rig count has continued to trend lower. The number of active oil rigs has fallen by 6 over the last week to 546, which is the lowest level seen since April last year. The rig count has fallen by 77 since mid-January and the slowdown in drilling activity will call into question how much supply growth we will see from the US. Falling drilling activity in the US will be welcome by OPEC+ members, as in theory, it should make their output policy more effective, though demand has been a big concern for the market which has more than offset the recent cuts seen from OPEC+ members.   The latest positioning data shows that speculators increased their net long in ICE Brent by 16,116 lots over the last reporting week to 190,386 lots. This move was predominantly driven by fresh buying with the gross long increasing by 12,996 lots. However, given the price action seen since the last reporting week, we are likely to have seen some of these longs liquidate already. The net speculative long in ICE gasoil increased by 12,250 lots to 16,191 lots over the week. This was largely driven by short covering. The gross short declined by 10,319 lots over the period.  Refinery outages have been supportive for middle distillates in recent weeks and if these outages continue, there is room for further short covering.   There is very little on the agenda for energy markets this week with the exception of the regular weekly releases.
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.
Diesel Supply Concerns Grow as Russia Bans Exports: Impact on Middle Distillate Markets

Diesel Supply Concerns Grow as Russia Bans Exports: Impact on Middle Distillate Markets

ING Economics ING Economics 25.09.2023 11:10
Diesel supply concerns grow with Russian export ban Middle distillate markets received another boost yesterday after Russia announced that it would be temporarily banning diesel and gasoline exports. This is at a time when there is already plenty of concern around middle distillate availability as we head into the Northern Hemisphere winter.   What Russia announced Russia announced that it would be temporarily banning the export of diesel and gasoline in order to try to take some pressure off domestic fuel prices. The ban comes into effect from 21 September with no end date as of yet. Even prior to the announcement, Russian diesel exports had come under pressure through September due to domestic refinery maintenance and efforts from the government to increase supply in the domestic market. The impact on the middle distillate market has been clear: ICE gasoil settled 4.51% higher on the day of the announcement, whilst the November gasoil crack rallied above $37/bbl at one stage, and the prompt ICE gasoil time spread saw its backwardation widen to more than $35/tonne, highlighting the tightness in the middle distillate market.   Middle distillate market rallies on tightness concerns   How important is Russian diesel and gasoline supply? Russia is a crucial supplier of refined products to global markets, with it exporting in the region of 1MMbbls/d of diesel. In fact, Russia is the second-largest exporter of diesel, with just the US exporting larger volumes. As a result, this is a key development as we head into the Northern Hemisphere winter, a period where we usually see a seasonal pick-up in demand. The export ban is less concerning for the gasoline market, with Russian exports of gasoline and gasoline components averaging around 145Mbbls/d so far in 2023, a loss that the global market should be able to absorb more easily. How severe of an impact the loss of Russian diesel has on the global market will really depend on how long the export ban is in place. Although, given the likely domestic stock build we will see as a result of the ban, we would not expect it to be prolonged.   Ban only adds to an already-tight middle distillate market The middle distillate market was already seeing significant strength ahead of this ban with inventories tight in the US, Europe and Asia as we head into the Northern Hemisphere winter. There were a number of factors behind this tightness, including OPEC+ supply cuts, recovering air travel, limited refining capacity growth, and in Europe, the struggle of being able to fully replace Russian middle distillates after the EU ban came into effect in February. The loss of around 1MMbbls/d of Russian diesel in the global market will be felt and only reinforces the supportive view we have held on middle distillate cracks and as a result on refinery margins. This does leave some upside risk to our view that the ICE gasoil crack would average US$30/bbl for the remainder of the year. How much upside really depends on the duration of the ban.  We believe that margins will remain elevated in an attempt to get refiners to increase run rates. However, given that part of the issue is due to constraints in refining capacity as well as tightness in the medium sour crude market, the ability to significantly increase run rates and increase middle distillate supply could be difficult.   Middle distillates inventories are already tight
The Commodities Feed: Oil fundamentals remain supportive

The Commodities Feed: Oil fundamentals remain supportive

ING Economics ING Economics 25.09.2023 11:25
The Commodities Feed: Oil fundamentals remain supportive The oil market remains well supported on the back of constructive fundamentals, and Russia’s ban on diesel and gasoline exports also adds support. The calendar this week is looking fairly quiet.   Energy - Speculative appetite grows The oil market has held relatively steady in recent days with tightness in the physical market coupled with Russia’s recent export ban on diesel and gasoline offset by a fairly hawkish FOMC meeting last week. As a result, Brent continues to hold above US$93/bbl. Speculators continue to become more constructive towards the market with the speculative net long in ICE Brent growing by 17,904 lots over the last reporting week to 265,531 lots as of last Tuesday. This is the largest net long speculators have held since March, and the increase over the week was predominantly driven by short covering. Similarly, speculators increased their net long in NYMEX WTI by 15,084 lots over the reporting week to 294,396 lots - the largest position held since February last year. However, speculators cut their net long in ICE gasoil, which fell by 6,940 lots over the week to 59,359 lots as of last Tuesday. The current net long is likely somewhat larger than this, given the move seen in the gasoil market following Russia's ban on diesel and gasoline exports. As we mentioned in our note last week, while the ban only reinforces our supportive view on middle distillates, we do not believe it will remain in place for long, given the domestic storage constraints that will be soon faced by not allowing roughly 1MMbbls/d of diesel exports. The latest data from Baker Hughes shows that the US oil rig count fell by 8 over the last week to 507. This is the first weekly decline in 3 weeks and sees a resumption in the fall we have seen for much of this year. The number of active oil rigs has fallen by 114 rigs since the start of the year. The fall in rig count this year is what has given OPEC+ the confidence to cut output without having to worry too much about losing market share to non-OPEC producers. European natural gas prices managed to settle more than 9% higher over the course of last week. This is despite strike action at Australian LNG facilities coming to an end, along with Norwegian gas flows continuing to recover as capacity at the Troll field returns following maintenance. With EU storage almost 95% full and supply risks subsiding, we would expect to see some downward pressure on the front end of the curve.

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