Oil under pressure due to rising U.S. inventories
Investors look ahead to OPEC meeting this weekend
Oil prices surged above $70-abarrel Wednesday after a weekly report showed U.S. inventories of crude oil dropping to a three-anda-half-year low.
Light, sweet crude for October delivery was 1.3% higher at $70.48 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange. Brent crude, the global benchmark, rose 0.4% to $79.38 a barrel.
The Energy Information Administration reported U.S. crude oil stockpiles fell by 2.1 million barrels last week to 394 million barrels. That marks a fifth straight weekly decline and is the lowest total since February 2015. It is also 142 million barrels less than a record-high 536 million barrels of inventory in March 2017, during the height of the oil bust. Gasoline stockpiles also declined last week, by 1.7 million barrels.
Analysts said the continued drop in oil stockpiles even though the summer driving season is in
the rear-view mirror is partly a result of rising U.S. crude oil exports, which have been helped in recent weeks by a widening differential between U.S. benchmark prices, known as West Texas Intermediate, and the global benchmark, Brent. Crude oil exports surged for a second straight week last week, to 2.4 million barrels a day, the EIA said.
“We see another counter-seasonal draw to crude inventories as rising exports have countered a rebound in imports,” said Matt Smith, director of commodity research at Clipper Data. “The gasoline draw is also supportive amid elevated refinery runs.”
While Wednesday’s report wasn’t across-the-board bullish—total stockpiles of oil and petroleum products fell by just 400,000 barrels—they said traders’ expectations for the report were low since the American Petroleum Institute, an industry group, issued a bearish report Tuesday on oil inventories. “Overall the report was barely bullish, but decidedly bullish compared to the API,” said Kyle Cooper, a consultant at ION Energy.
The rise in oil prices Wednesday adds to strong gains Tuesday that were partly due to by reports “suggesting Saudi Arabia may have moved towards at least temporarily accepting $80+ crude,” according to analysts at consultancy JBC Energy. “The market may have taken this a sign that supplies may not go up much in response to further declines in Iranian crude exports,” the analysts wrote in a note Wednesday.
The Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its production allies, including Russia, are set to meet this weekend in Algiers to debate a further ramp up in production. The producers in late June agreed to begin boosting output by up to one million barrels a day after more than a year of holding back production.
“U.S. sanctions on Iran’s oil exports are just six weeks away and logic suggests the OPEC+ alliance will ramp up output to alleviate the shortfall,” said Stephen Brennock, an analyst at brokerage PVM Oil Associates Ltd. “Yet with the Saudis at ease with higher oil prices and wary of riling the Iranians, the OPEC kingpin might favor maintaining the status quo,” he added.
Prices have been bolstered in recent weeks as buyers of Iranian crude have begun to significantly reduce imports ahead of U.S. sanctions taking effect at the start of November. Brent last week temporarily breached the $80 a barrel threshold for the first time since May—a level that until that point had not been since in over 3 1/2 years.
Among refined products, gasoline futures for October delivery rose 0.6% to $2.0173 a gallon. Diesel futures rose 0.1% to $2.2414 a gallon.