Oil & Gas Prices - Sept 3
Posted: Fri Sep 03, 2021 8:57 am
Opening Prices
> WTI is up 23c to $70.22/Bbl, and Brent is up 41c to $73.44/Bbl.
> Natural gas is up 4.0c to $4.681/MMBtu.
AEGIS Notes
Oil
WTI is trading above $70/Bbl after settling yesterday at $69.99/Bbl
> Investors are wagering the oil market can absorb additional supply from OPEC+
> Nearly 94% of Gulf of Mexico crude production remains shut days after Ida left the region
> About 1.3 MMBbl/d of U.S. refining capacity remains offline, down from 2.5 MMBbl/d earlier in the week
The Department of Energy has authorized Exxon Mobil Corp. to receive crude from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) to help with the production of fuels (Bloomberg)
> Exxon will be getting 1.5 MMBbl from the SPR for its Baton Rouge refinery
> The company will have to restock the same amount of oil plus premium barrels within a few months, according to the statement
Natural Gas
More Gulf of Mexico (GoM) production was brought offline yesterday (Platts)
> According to the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement, 91.29% of GoM production is shut in, an increase from 83.21% on Wednesday
> Offshore GoM production is at 167 MMcf/d, down from the 2.5 Bcf/d averaged in the 30 days leading up to Hurricane Ida
> Gas demand in Louisiana has averaged 1.04 Bcf/d over the last two days, down about 200 MMcf/d from pre-storm levels
The EIA reported a second consecutive injection to storage below analysts estimates
> The agency reported a 20-Bcf injection for the week ending August 27, in contrast with the average estimate of 25 Bcf (Bloomberg)
> Inventories for the US are now at a deficit of 579 Bcf to last year and a deficit of 222 Bcf to the five-year average, and working gas inventories increased to 2.871 Tcf. < The deficit to last year is significant because in mid-November 2021 (when the winter heating season begins) the US will have less natural gas in storage than it had on December 25, 2020 (3,460 BCF).
> WTI is up 23c to $70.22/Bbl, and Brent is up 41c to $73.44/Bbl.
> Natural gas is up 4.0c to $4.681/MMBtu.
AEGIS Notes
Oil
WTI is trading above $70/Bbl after settling yesterday at $69.99/Bbl
> Investors are wagering the oil market can absorb additional supply from OPEC+
> Nearly 94% of Gulf of Mexico crude production remains shut days after Ida left the region
> About 1.3 MMBbl/d of U.S. refining capacity remains offline, down from 2.5 MMBbl/d earlier in the week
The Department of Energy has authorized Exxon Mobil Corp. to receive crude from the Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) to help with the production of fuels (Bloomberg)
> Exxon will be getting 1.5 MMBbl from the SPR for its Baton Rouge refinery
> The company will have to restock the same amount of oil plus premium barrels within a few months, according to the statement
Natural Gas
More Gulf of Mexico (GoM) production was brought offline yesterday (Platts)
> According to the Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement, 91.29% of GoM production is shut in, an increase from 83.21% on Wednesday
> Offshore GoM production is at 167 MMcf/d, down from the 2.5 Bcf/d averaged in the 30 days leading up to Hurricane Ida
> Gas demand in Louisiana has averaged 1.04 Bcf/d over the last two days, down about 200 MMcf/d from pre-storm levels
The EIA reported a second consecutive injection to storage below analysts estimates
> The agency reported a 20-Bcf injection for the week ending August 27, in contrast with the average estimate of 25 Bcf (Bloomberg)
> Inventories for the US are now at a deficit of 579 Bcf to last year and a deficit of 222 Bcf to the five-year average, and working gas inventories increased to 2.871 Tcf. < The deficit to last year is significant because in mid-November 2021 (when the winter heating season begins) the US will have less natural gas in storage than it had on December 25, 2020 (3,460 BCF).