Energy Prices Up Slightly

Market TalkThursday, Sep 5 2019
Energy Futures Weaken

Energy prices are up slightly this morning after a heavy wave of buying yesterday. A weaker dollar pushed energy prices some 4% higher Wednesday, making up for Tuesday’s losses and then some. RBOB prompt month futures were last seen just over $1.53 per gallon while HO looks like it may make a run at $1.90; crude oil jumped over $56 dollars per barrel, tempting monthly highs.

The Tanker Saga™ had a very interesting development yesterday: it wasn’t a Nigerian prince but a top ranking official in the US State Department that contacted the captain of the oil tanker heading to Syria, offering millions of dollars in cash to hand over the carrier. The rather unorthodox tactic is Washington’s latest bid in an effort to exert maximum pressure on Iran over its breach of the 2015 nuclear agreement which seems to have spiraled even more out of control.

Hurricane Dorian has left Florida and Georgia in its rearview as it progresses northward. Current forecasts has the storm potentially making landfall on the North Carolina coast, but hurricane warnings have nonetheless been issued comprehensively from South Carolina up through parts of Virginia.

Tropical storm Gabrielle still looks to be a non event for the American mainland: the 7th named storm of the season is projected to continue heading northwest over the weekend and fizzle out somewhere in the north Atlantic.

The API published a surprise small crude oil inventory build yesterday afternoon, tempering some of the day’s earlier gains. Eyes now turn to the DOE for confirmation of the Institute’s report, and futures seem content to hover above unchanged leading up to the publication, scheduled for release at 10am CDT.

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The Energy Complex Is Trading Modestly Lower So Far This Morning With WTI Crude Oil Futures Leading The Way

The energy complex is trading modestly lower so far this morning with WTI crude oil futures leading the way, exchanging hands $1.50 per barrel lower (-1.9%) than Tuesday’s settlement price. Gasoline and diesel futures are following suit, dropping .0390 and .0280 per gallon, respectively.

A surprise crude oil build (one that doesn’t include any changes to the SPR) as reported by the American Petroleum Institute late Tuesday is taking credit for the bearish trading seen this morning. The Institute estimated an increase in crude inventories of ~5 million barrels and drop in both refined product stocks of 1.5-2.2 million barrels for the week ending April 26. The Department of Energy’s official report is due out at it’s regular time (9:30 CDT) this morning.

The Senate Budget Committee is scheduled to hold a hearing at 9:00 AM EST this morning regarding a years-long probe into climate change messaging from big oil companies. Following a 3-year investigation, Senate and House Democrats released their final report yesterday alleging major oil companies have internally recognized the impacts of fossil fuels on the climate since as far back as the 1960s, while privately lobbying against climate legislation and publicly presenting a narrative that undermines a connection between the two. Whether this will have a tangible effect on policy or is just the latest announcement in an election-yeardeluge is yet to be seen.

Speaking of deluge, another drone attack was launched against Russian infrastructure earlier this morning, causing an explosion and subsequent fire at Rosneft’s Ryazan refinery. While likely a response to the five killed from Russian missile strikes in Odesa and Kharkiv, Kyiv has yet to officially claim responsibility for the attack that successfully struck state infrastructure just 130 miles from Moscow.

The crude oil bears are on a tear this past week, blowing past WTI’s 5 and 10 day moving averages on Monday and opening below it’s 50-day MA this morning. The $80 level is likely a key resistance level, below which the path is open for the American oil benchmark to drop to the $75 level in short order.

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Energy Futures Are Drifting Quietly Higher This Morning

Energy futures are drifting quietly higher this morning as a new round of hostage negotiations between Israel and Hamas seem to show relative promise. It seems the market is focusing on the prospect of cooler heads prevailing, rather than the pervasive rocket/drone exchanges, the latest of which took place over Israel’s northern border.

A warmer-than-expected winter depressed diesel demand and, likewise, distillate refinery margins, which has dropped to its lowest level since the beginning of 2022. The ULSD forward curve has shifted into contango (carry) over the past month as traders seek to store their diesel inventories and hope for a pickup in demand, domestic or otherwise.

The DOE announced it had continued rebuilding it’s Strategic Petroleum Reserve this month, noting the addition of 2.3 million barrels of crude so far in April. Depending on what the private sector reported for last week, Wednesday’s DOE report may put current national crude oil inventories (include those of the SPR) above the year’s previous levels, something we haven’t seen since April of 2022, two months after Ukraine war began.

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Click here to download a PDF of today's TACenergy Market Talk.