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EIA Oil Storage Report - May 16

Posted: Wed May 16, 2018 1:22 pm
by dan_s
Per EIA U.S. commercial crude oil inventories decreased by 1.4 million barrels from the previous week.
At 432.4 million barrels, U.S. crude oil inventories are in the lower half of the average range for this time of year.

Gasoline inventories decreased by 3.8 million barrels last week while distillate fuel inventories decreased by 0.1 million barrels last week.
Total commercial petroleum inventories decreased by 0.7 million barrels last week.

Demand Remains Robust

Demand remain strong. The EIA reported that total products demand the last month averaged about 20.1 million barrels per day, up by 1.5% year over year. Over the last month, gasoline demand averaged about 9.4 million barrels per day, up by 0.7% year over year. Distillate fuel demand averaged about 4.2 million barrels per day over the last four weeks, up by 3.0% year over year.
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Reuters at ~1PM ET - International Opinions on the future price of oil
Brent crude prices will sustain levels above $70 a barrel for longer, as U.S. President Donald Trump's decision to reimposes sanctions on Iran is likely to tighten supply, a Reuters poll of analysts showed on Wednesday.

A survey of 11 analysts showed Brent crude (LCOc1) prices were likely to average $71.22 a barrel this year and $71.26 in 2019, a sharp increase from the $67.40 and $66.39-per-barrel levels forecast in the April poll. Brent has averaged about $69 a barrel this year thus far and nearly touched $80 a barrel this week.

"Oil markets should become tighter due to a lower output from Iran, coupled with an ongoing contraction in Venezuelan output and OPEC cuts," said Daniela Corsini, commodity market economist at Intesa Sanpaolo (MI:ISP) in Milan.

U.S. light crude (CLc1) was seen averaging $66.62 a barrel this year and $67.09 a barrel in 2019. This compares with an outlook for $63.23 per barrel in 2018 and $62.16 in 2019 in our April poll.

Last week, Trump pulled the United States out of a 2015 international nuclear pact with Iran, and plans to reimpose U.S. economic sanctions on the country. That has cast uncertainty over global oil supplies, and investors lately have been betting on prices exceeding $80 or $90 a barrel, though European nations are not likely to follow suit as they did during the Obama administration.

Five of the 11 analysts polled expected a supply reduction from Iran of between 300,000 to 500,000 barrels per day (bpd), while exports from the country were expected to drop by a maximum of 700,000 bpd by the first half of 2019. The nation currently produces 3.8 million bpd.

Oil prices are hovering near 3-1/2-year highs, having jumped over 70 percent over the last year, boosted by rising demand and a deal to curb output by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), led by Saudi Arabia and other producers, including Russia. The International Energy Agency on Wednesday warned that demand could be sapped by higher-than-expected prices.

"Global oil inventories are already either below or at the five-year average. This means that the market will have little cushion against any other unexpected production outage at a time when geopolitical risks abound. These risks can come from Libya, Nigeria and Venezuela," said Shakil Begg, head of Thomson Reuters Oil Research and Forecasts.

A global oil glut has been virtually eliminated, figures published by OPEC showed on Monday, with Venezuela, whose output has plunged due to an economic crisis, reporting production fell to 1.5 million bpd in April, lowest in decades.

A majority of analysts said OPEC was unlikely to prematurely end its output curbs, while some analysts said the imposition of trade restrictions could affect compliance levels and provide countries like Saudi Arabia and Russia an opportunity to regain market share.

Commerzbank (DE:CBKG) and Emirates NBD had the lowest 2018 Brent price forecast at $69 a barrel, while Nomisma Energia had the highest forecast for the year at $75.41.

Re: EIA Oil Storage Report - May 16

Posted: Wed May 16, 2018 1:29 pm
by dan_s
Comments below are from The Raymond James Energy Sector Team:

This week's petroleum inventories update was mixed relative to consensus. "Big Three" petroleum inventories (crude, gasoline, distillates – with crude including the SPR draw) fell by 6.8 MMBbls, versus consensus estimates for a draw of 5.4 MMBbls. Commercial crude inventories fell by 1.4 MMBbls, versus consensus calling for a draw of 2.0 MMBbls. Cushing crude inventories rose by 0.1 MMBbls, while Gulf Coast inventories were down 1.5 MMBbls. Total petroleum inventories were down 0.7 MMBbls. Gasoline posted a draw of 3.8 MMBbls versus consensus calling for a draw of 1.4 MMBbls and distillate inventories posted a draw of 0.1 MMBbls (which remain at a more than three-year low), versus consensus calling for a draw of 2.0 MMBbls.

As always, regardless of their week-to-week movements, U.S. inventories do not constitute a holistic picture of global (or even total OECD) inventories, but they represent the only ''real-time'' data source.

Refinery utilization rose to 91.1% from 90.4% last week. Total petroleum imports were 9.8 MMBbls per day, down from last week’s 9.9 MMBbls per day. Total petroleum product demand decreased 0.1% after last week’s 1.9% increase. On a four-week moving average basis, there is a 1.5% y/y increase in total demand. U.S. (lower 48) production was 10.22 MMBbls per day, up 0.02 MMBbls per day from last week. As always, weekly demand and supply figures are provisional estimates subject to frequent revisions.