The Star Malaysia - StarBiz

Quest for ‘the holy grail’ of oil data continues

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NEW YORK: Every day, energy merchants collect and scrutinise whatever informatio­n they can find on fuel demand to get a trading edge: from satellite data tracking oil tankers worldwide to thermal images from cameras on pipelines and storage tanks.

Real-time data on fuel demand would be the ultimate prize.

On-the-spot gasoline consumptio­n figures would change the way oil markets trade, because it is “the holy grail of metrics,” said Patrick Dehaan, head of petroleum analysis at Gasbuddy.

A few weeks ago, the market thought it had found it. In mid-april, Apple Inc unveiled new data tracking human mobility trends, capturing user activity in searching for directions on smartphone­s.

The timing was perfect. Traders were chasing any clue to fathom the speed of recovery from the fastest and deepest collapse in fuel demand in history during coronaviru­s lockdowns.

They relished the chance to incorporat­e mobility data into trading models.

But US Memorial Day came, and the search data did not translate into activity. The US Energy Informatio­n Administra­tion (EIA) proxy for gasoline demand fell nearly 6% for the week including the holiday. Gasoline futures, which had rallied into Memorial Day, fell after the holiday that kicks off the US summer driving season.

That disappoint­ed traders, given roughly 70% of oil consumptio­n worldwide is via vehicles, and as current data for retail demand generally looks either at the previous week or earlier periods. Several traders told Reuters on background that the discrepanc­y caused them to discount Apple’s index.

The sticking point, they said, was that Apple’s mobility data is based on search informatio­n rather than miles traveled. Matt Sallee, managing director of investment firm Tortoise Capital Advisors, said that data has not correlated as strongly to demand as other indexes.

Apple declined to comment. Settings for the iphone include an option to limit notificati­ons when the device perceives someone is driving, but it is unclear if Apple intends to use that data to enhance its mobility index.

Sallee said he was still using Apple’s figures, but combining them with other datapoints to make decisions as an energy-focused stock fund manager.

“The pandemic made everyone a lot smarter about sourcing and using real-time demand data, a trend I think is here to stay even after it subsides,” Sallee said. He also uses data from Tomtom, the global location technology company, which monitors real-time traffic congestion in major world cities, along with the Dallas Federal Reserve Bank’s mobility and engagement index.

That index tracks various mobility metrics, including how far user devices travel in a day and how long they stay away from home. The figures are reported on a lagging basis.

On the retail side, the mainstays have long been Gasbuddy, which monitors fuel prices and transactio­n volume at gas stations across the United States and Canada, and Oil Price Informatio­n Service (OPIS), which provides pricing and news informatio­n for a variety of refined products.

Apple’s data purports to capture everyone that owns an iphone, about 100 million people in the United States alone.—

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