WTI was trading lower overnight after the bounce on API’s big crude draw was eviscerated by escalating trade wars. However, when DOE reported a massive 12.63mm crude draw – the most since Sept 2016 – WTI prices spiked (after kneejerking lower first).

Bloomberg’s Michael Jeffers notes that American oil stocks are now at the lowest level since February of 2015, flying in the face of bumper production. The refineries are in overdrive for this time of year, even as utilization fell slightly. Exports are still over 2 million barrels a day. 

API

  • Crude -6.8mm

  • Cushing +1.952mm (-1.3mm exp)

  • Gasoline -1.59mm

  • Distillates -1.925mm

DOE

  • Crude -12.63mm (-3.79mm exp) – biggest draw since Sept 2016

  • Cushing -2.062mm (-1.3mm exp)

  • Gasoline -694k (-1mm exp)

  • Distillates +4.125mm – biggest build since Jan 2018

Following last week’s surprise crude build (from DOE), API reported a much bigger than expected crude draw

Bloomberg Intelligence Energy Analyst Fernando Valle notes that exports of refined products need to rise if crack spreads are to recover from recent lows. Rising crude prices have dampened demand growth just as red-hot refinery utilization has flooded domestic markets, pushing down margins.

All eyes remain on US crude production which has now flatlined for 4 straight weeks…

 

Amid Permian pipeline bottlenecks.

“U.S. production is constrained because we don’t have enough pipelines coming out of the Permian,” James Williams, president of energy researcher WTRG Economics, says.

WTI prices spiked on the big crude draw from API but once trade tariff headlines hit, prices tumbled. Then when DOE printed, the machines went nuts, initially puking lower then spiking higher.

 

 

 

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