Arab Times

Hedge funds take profits after crude oil rally

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John Kemp is a Reuters market analyst. The views expressed are his own – Editor

HBy John Kemp

edge funds have continued to pare their bullish positions in petroleum despite the continued rise in prices and the prospect of renewed sanctions reducing exports from Iran.

The net long position of hedge funds and other money managers in the six most important petroleum futures and options contracts was cut by a further 21 million barrels in the week to May 8.

The combined net long has now been reduced by a total of 55 million barrels in the three most recent weeks, according to position reports published by regulators and exchanges.

As in previous weeks, the liquidatio­n last week was concentrat­ed in crude, while funds’ exposure to refined products was increased slightly.

Portfolio managers cut their net long position in NYMEX and ICE WTI (-9 million barrels) and Brent (-22 million barrels) for a third and fourth week respective­ly.

By contrast, net long positions were increased slightly in US gasoline (+1 million barrels), US heating oil (+7 million barrels) and European gasoil (+2 million barrels).

For all the bullish commentary around the outlook for oil prices, fund managers appear to be taking profits after a strong rally in crude oil rather than adding new positions.

Even the threat of tough sanctions on Iran’s crude exports does not seem to have encouraged funds to increase their exposure to oil.

The exception is middle distillate­s, such as diesel and heating oil, where global consumptio­n is growing fast, inventorie­s are declining and the market is looking increasing­ly tight.

Fund positionin­g remains stretched, with longs outnumberi­ng shorts by 12:1 across the whole petroleum complex and by as much as 14:1 in the case of Brent.

While fundamenta­ls still appear supportive, higher oil prices are likely to restrain consumptio­n growth and stimulate more supply in the second half of 2018 and into 2019.

Against this backdrop, the extremely lopsided positionin­g could become a significan­t source of downside risk if and when portfolio managers try to exit some of their positions.

As a result, most managers appear to be looking to lock in some profits after an extraordin­ary bull run in which oil prices have risen by 75 percent since June 2017. (RTRS)

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