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Weekly Oil Inventories Report

This report reviews weekly oil inventory data from the US EIA’s Weekly Petroleum Status Report, Global Insights’ ARA Independent Storage and International Enterprise’s Singapore product storage

Brent Review: 14th September 2024

The Dec’24 Brent crude futures contract cratered by $3 overnight Monday (14 Oct) from around $77.50/bbl to $74.50/bbl, before trading rangebound for the remainder of the week between $74/bbl and $75/bbl. Prices are set for their biggest weekly decline since

US EIA Weekly Report

This report reviews the key data from the US EIA’s Weekly Petroleum Status Report

COT Report: Going Bear-serk

See all the updates across the barrel in this week’s Onyx Commitment of Traders report, as well as six contracts to watch for the week ahead. Click on the relevant button below to access your COT report.

OECD Oil Inventories held by industry

The report covers oil inventory data in the OECD held by industry in million barrels and days of forward demand, as provided by the International Energy Agency

Onyx CFTC Style COT Reports – 14 Oct 2024

Onyx’s in-house CTA positioning model determines the net positioning of CTAs in a range of futures benchmarks, employing a trend following model that uses price data and realized volatility. The week ending 08 Oct saw CTA positioning pick up significantly, after remaining relatively flat for the previous week. There was a net increase of nearly 106mb in combined futures between 01 and 07 Oct, with the rate of growth in CTA positioning slightly slowing towards the end of the week. In crude, we saw net positioning in Brent increase from -37.2mb to -10mb, the largest jump in CTA net positioning across all futures contracts for the week to 08 Oct. Meanwhile, WTI showed a similar pattern, increasing from around -32.1mb to just under -9.7mb over the week. The product’s net positioning all recovered after falling the previous week, including RBOB with the lowest net positioning, increasing from -43.4mb up to -24.1mb by 08 Oct.

Weekly Oil Inventories Report

This report reviews weekly oil inventory data from the US EIA’s Weekly Petroleum Status Report, Global Insights’ ARA Independent Storage and International Enterprise’s Singapore product storage

COT Report: The Market Digesting the Macros

See all the updates across the barrel in this week’s Onyx Commitment of Traders report, as well as six contracts to watch for the week ahead. Click on the relevant button below to access your COT report.

US EIA Weekly Report

This report reviews the key data from the US EIA’s Weekly Petroleum Status Report

Onyx CFTC Style COT Reports – 07 Oct 2024

Onyx’s in-house CTA positioning model determines the net positioning of CTAs in a range of futures benchmarks. The week ending 01 Oct saw CTA positioning quite flat in the week, overall seeing a small net increase in the combined futures. Since then, there has been good strength from CTAs, with Brent passing its 50-day average, which likely bouldered their strength. In crude, we saw Brent clock in fall in net positioning, from around -30mb to -37mb on 1 Oct. WTI futures also decreased in the week, from over -25mb on 24 Sep to -33mb on 1 Oct. The largest increase in CTA net positioning in the week to 01 Sep was in ICE Brent. The products’ net positioning all fell weakly, with RBOB seeing RBOB continuing to see the lowest net positioning in tepid market conditions.

Brent Forecast: 7th October

Powered by Volatility The Dec’24 Brent futures contract fell below $78.00/bbl on Friday evening but again rallied to $79.65/bbl on 07 Oct at 10:40 BST (time of writing). Volatility remains elevated in the benchmark crude futures contract, leading us to

Brent Forecast Review: 4th October 2024

Turbulent Times Ahead On Monday, we predicted the Dec’24 Brent futures to finish the week between $69-74/bbl amid an oversupplied oil market. However, the futures contract witnessed an injection of bullish sentiment due to growing concerns regarding the regional escalation

COT Report: Enough to Break the Cycle?

See all the updates across the barrel in this week’s Onyx Commitment of Traders report, as well as six contracts to watch for the week ahead. Click on the relevant button below to access your COT report.

US EIA Weekly Report

This report reviews the key data from the US EIA’s Weekly Petroleum Status Report

Onyx CFTC Style COT Reports – 30 Sep 2024

Onyx’s in-house CTA positioning model determines the net positioning of CTAs in a range of futures benchmarks. The week ending 27 Sep saw CTA positioning rise and fall, overall to leave a very small net change. In crude, we saw Brent clock in an almost 0% change increase, w/w, at around -32.8mb after reaching a peak of almost -30mb. WTI futures saw heavier selling as the net positioning fell around 5mb (20%). The largest increase in CTA net positioning in the week to 24 Sep was in ICE Gasoil, which saw an almost 6mb increase, this brought the CTA net positioning for gasoil to the highest in the selected futures.

Brent Forecast: 27th September 2024

We are looking for the front-month December 24 contract to finish the week between $69-74/bbl with the drivers dictating the rangebound regime essentially unchanged: Geopolitical tensions in the Middle East moved a notch higher. Israel has stepped up kinetic action

Brent Forecast Review: 27th September 2024

Lacking a spark   We expected Nov’24 Brent futures to end the week trading between $70/bbl and $75.00/bbl as we failed to see it breaking out of a rangebound market. Price action this week validated this view, with the contract trading

Weekly Oil Inventories Report

This report reviews weekly oil inventory data from the US EIA’s Weekly Petroleum Status Report, Global Insights’ ARA Independent Storage and International Enterprise’s Singapore product storage

COT Report: Risk off…. Chill out?

See all the updates across the barrel in this week’s Onyx Commitment of Traders report, as well as six contracts to watch for the week ahead. Click on the relevant button below to access your COT report.

US EIA Weekly Report

This report reviews the key data from the US EIA’s Weekly Petroleum Status Report

Onyx CFTC Style COT Reports – 23 Sep 2024

Onyx’s in-house CTA positioning model determines the net positioning of CTAs in a range of futures benchmarks. The week ending 20 Sep saw CTA positioning rise across the crude futures alongside oil products albeit still remaining very net short. In crude, we saw Brent and WTI futures clock in a 34% and 39% increase, w/w, to -32.9k lots and -24.5k lots, respectively. This support emerged after CTA positioning approached the “max short” levels recorded in both contracts. Oil products also witnessed a rise in CTA net positioning from last week’s extremely short position. In the middle distillates complex, gasoil and heating oil climbed by 29% and 22%, respectively, to -33k lots each. In gasoline, RBOB futures recorded a 20% increase in CTA net length w/w to -37.8k lots.

Brent Forecast: 23rd September 2024

Lacking a spark, continued rangebound prices in Brent. We are looking for the front month Nov’24 contract to finish the week between $70-75/bbl as we fail to see any reason for Brent to break out of this rangebound regime. This

Brent Forecast Review: 20th September 2024

Finally, some strength! At the start of the week, we forecasted that the front-month Brent futures contract would tick slightly higher through the week, but ultimately remain rangebound between $71-74/bbl. As of 20 Sep, 11:50 BST (time of writing), the

Global PMI Report

This report covers services and manufacturing PMI across the G20 countries

Weekly Oil Inventories Report

This report reviews weekly oil inventory data from the US EIA’s Weekly Petroleum Status Report, Global Insights’ ARA Independent Storage and International Enterprise’s Singapore product storage

US EIA Weekly Report

This report reviews the key data from the US EIA’s Weekly Petroleum Status Report

OECD Oil Inventories held by industry

The report covers oil inventory data in the OECD held by industry in million barrels and days of forward demand, as provided by the International Energy Agency

Onyx CFTC Style COT Reports – 16 Sep 2024

Onyx’s in-house CTA positioning model determines the net positioning of CTAs in a range of futures benchmarks. This past week saw positioning turn more short across crude oil and refined product futures. CTA positioning in Brent and WTI futures fell by 9.80% and 3.65%, respectively, to around -50k and -40k lots on 16 Sep – testing previous “max short” levels for both contracts. At this level, CTAs are at a prime spot to retrace upwards from this extreme positioning. Similarly, we saw CTA positions in gasoil and heating oil decline by 9.85% and 7.90% w/w to -44k lots and -42k lots on 16 Sep. Finally, RBOB futures saw CTA positioning decline by 9.8% to nearly -50k lots, just shy of the eight-year low of -54.5k lots.

Brent Forecast: 16th September 2024

Is $70/bbl the new $80/bbl? The Nov ’24 Brent futures witnessed a tumultuous last week, briefly falling below $70/bbl for the first time in three years before finding support here. While the benchmark crude oil futures contract remains above this

Edge Updates

The Officials: Europe’s kicked the bucket

We’re hearing more and more people say Europe is slowly dying. We disagree. We think it is dying rather quickly. Economically, we mean. Or maybe it’s already in the zombie stage. The heartbeat is faint but the rhetoric is still strong. It reminds us of AI hallucinations. Brain and reality are not aligned. Debt and manufacturing weakness don’t make the region look healthy and it’s verging on flatlining. Just check out France’s insolvency filings! Corporate bankruptcies are up 49% since August 2021. Business as usual, nothing to see… Or better yet, nothing to see here after the companies are dead.

European Window: Brent Falls to $73.00/bbl

Dec’24 Brent futures weakened this afternoon, from over $74.50/bbl at 13:20 BST to $72.55/bbl at 16:25 BS, recovering $73.25/bbl at 17:10 BST (time of writing). Total is planning a shutdown of its largest European refinery, in Antwerp, in 2025. This facility, which is the company’s biggest oil-processing plant in Europe with a capacity of around 340kb/d, will undergo maintenance starting in September. The scheduled work will focus on the crude processing units and one of the refinery’s two fluid catalytic crackers (FCCs). China’s diesel exports fell to 350kt in September, the lowest since June 2023, due to limited shipment quotas and near break-even margins. This marks a 71% drop from the same month last year, with total petroleum exports reaching just 730kt, the lowest since April. China’s new home prices in September saw their steepest decline since May 2015, dropping 5.8% year-on-year, according to official data. This follows a 5.3% decrease in August, despite efforts to revive the property sector. At the time of writing, the front month (Dec/Jan’25) and six-month (Dec/Jun’25) Brent futures spreads are at $0.41/bbl and $1.43/bbl, respectively.

Fuel Oil Report – Bunkers Going Bonkers

High Sulfur Fuel Oil (HSFO) remains strong this fortnight in both Northwestern Europe (NWE) and Singapore, although we now see increasing volatility in the HSFO complex. The Nov’24 3.5% barge crack rallied to -$7.30/bbl on 14 Oct before simmering off to -$7.85/bbl on account of weak softer physical pricing but rallied to -$6.80/bbl on 18 Oct, likely supported by lower crude. The Nov/Dec’24 3.5% spread fell from $17/mt on 11 Oct to $12.50/mt on 17 Oct but saw support at this level. In the East, the 380 and 180 cst market both saw support this fortnight, with the Nov/Dec’24 380 spread rallying to $10.50/mt on 16 Oct – although it met resistance here. The Nov’24 and Dec’24 Visco (180 vs 380) witnessed significant buying by a Singaporean trade house and Middle Eastern NOC, with the Nov’24 rallying $5.50 to $15.75/mt from Oct 04-18 (at the time of writing).

The Officials: Lotsa Totsa

China beats GDP growth market expectations, but let’s start with Dubai and our famous Totsa Taureau! And, by the way, also keep an eye on the Brent/Dubai spread as Totsa sells North Sea and buys Middle East. Maybe they are following Macron’s destruction of the French budget as a hint to sell the European benchmark. It looks like Totsa’s monumental efforts in the Dubai window are paying dividends. Swaps remained steady, just 2c down from yesterday, as the physical strengthened. This put the phys premium back up to $1.68, above the October average again. Totsa must take much of the credit; it led the buyside pack’s forward march. The buyers and sellers came together at $74.19. Exxon hit bid after bid, but Reliance and Chevron were also selling. As ever, Mitsui joined Totsa on the buyside, and the old pals from way back in August, Vatman and Gobin, renewed their dynamic duo status, each picking up partials. But gone are the glory days of their domination of the window. Meanwhile, Trafi is keeping the market guessing about its strategy; in today’s window it flipped to the buyside, having been major seller in previous sessions. Repsol converged with Mitsui, nominating an Upper Zakum.

Overnight & Singapore Window: Brent Declines to $74.00/bbl Level

The Dec’24 Brent futures contract saw weakness this morning, trading from $74.76/bbl at 07:00 BST and declining to $74.06/bbl at 11:15 BST (time of writing). Prices lacked strength this morning amid reports of Chinese oil refining falling to a three-month low of 58.7 million tons, a reduction of 1.6% y/y, according to Bloomberg. In the news today, Israeli authorities have released a drone video allegedly displaying Hamas leader Yahya Sinwar dying in the ruins of building in southern Gaza, as per Reuters. Following Sinwar’s death, Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu has promised to continue conflict in Gaza and Lebanon. In other news, Chevron and the Nigerian National Petroleum Company (NNPC) have made a new oil discovery in the Niger Delta, according to S&P Global. Chevron has yet to offer information on potential production targets or a timeline for facility operations. Finally, Russian oil producer Lukoil stated that the company had no plans to buy back shares from foreign investors after requesting permission from the government to buy back 25% last year, Russia’s Deputy Finance Minister Alexei Moiseev said. At the time of writing, the front month (Dec/Jan’25) and six-month (Dec/Jun’25) Brent futures spreads are at $0.43/bbl and $1.62/bbl, respectively.

The Officials: Whacky diffs!

The physical and futures detachment still has us scratching our heads. Traders were waiting with offers on the table but found no bidder. Glencore offered a mid-Nov Ekofisk at Dated +$1.75 and a mid-Nov Forties at Dated +$0.45; BP and Total each offered an early-Nov Ekofisk at Dated +$1.45 and +$1.95, respectively. Phillips also offered a Midland for mid-Nov at +$1.75. A rare 640kb Hebron cargo was offered by Suncor at Dated -$2.15 for end-Nov loading. But none of these offers were met with a buyer.

Trader Meeting Notes: Geopolitical Merry-Go Round

Dec’24 Brent futures fell from close to $80.00/bbl to $74.00/bbl this week as the geopolitical risk premium was priced-out and back in at a rate that puts no one’s mind to rest. As soon as part of the premium has been chipped out of the price, mid to low-70s were not far behind, and they must feel at home. Volatility has dropped as $74.00/bbl has proven less mean-reverting and more mean-unwavering, with Dec’24 trading between $73.50/bbl and $75.00/bbl for a few days. The Washington Post seems confident in Iran’s energy security, although this was a bit undermined by Netanyahu purposefully undermining it and reminding the international community that they will act however they feel ‘necessary’. Chinese news, positive or negative, has taken a breather this week. The geopolitical tension is with all hopes of de-escalating, leaving little to distract from the supply/demand that the market has been happy to pin at mid-70s.

European Window: Brent Weakens To $74.10/bbl

The Dec’24 Brent futures contract strengthened marginally this afternoon, trading at $73.96/bbl at 12:00 BST and reaching $74.20/bbl at 17:50 BST (time of writing). We saw volatility in price action throughout the afternoon amid the release of the IEA October oil market report, alongside concerns of conflict escalation in the Middle East. In the news today, the IEA has released their oil market report for October, showing global oil demand is set to increase by just 862kb/d this year due to decelerating demand in China. This latest estimate is down from the 903kb/d forecast published in the September IEA report. In other news, Israeli troops have begun clearing landmines near Golan Heights, signalling a potential expansion of ground operations against Hezbollah for the first time further east along Lebanon’s border, according to Reuters. Finally, Russian refinery maintenance has pushed the country’s oil exports to their highest level in three months. Average oil exports inched up by 7kb/d to 3.33mb/d in the four weeks to 13 Oct, as per data compiled by Bloomberg. At the time of writing, the front month (Dec/Jan’25) and six-month (Dec/Jun’25) Brent futures spreads are at $0.37/bbl and $1.53/bbl, respectively.

The Officials: Totsa holds the fort in Dubai

The window was ram-packed with ‘sells to Totsa’ as bids were whacked almost as soon as they hit the table. The French major seems to be trying to defend a tired-looking physical premium which has declined from the $1.80s to $1.54 today. It reminded us of the Maginot line for those WW2 history buffs. We know what happened there. Totsa stepped on the gas and got hit for partial after partial, while Mitsui threw their hat in alongside the indefatigable French. At least someone in France has some money, even if the government doesn’t. Dear trader in Asia, look at Europe. It doesn’t look good.

Overnight & Singapore Window: Brent Weakens Marginally To $74.35/bbl

The Dec’24 Brent futures contract weakened amid choppy price action from $74.39/bbl at 07:00 BST to $74.35/bbl at 11:25 BST (time of writing). Price action showed volatility throughout the morning while Iran issued a warning to Israel against retaliation for Iran’s 01 Oct missile attack. In the news today, the commander of Iran’s Revolutionary Guards, Hossein Salami, stated in a televised speech: “if you (Israel) commit any aggression against any point, we will painfully attack the same point of yours”. Meanwhile, Israel has intensified strikes on Eastern Lebanon, with the town of Al-Khiam hit by seven airstrikes in less than 10 minutes last night, according to the state-affiliated National News Agency. In other news, Oman’s state-owned upstream oil and gas operator, OQ Exploration and Production Company (OQEP), raised over $2 billion from its IPO on the Muscat Stock Exchange. According to Bloomberg, the OQEP deal is the biggest Gulf IPO since the $2.5 billion share sale of Adnoc in 2023. At the time of writing, the front month (Dec/Jan’25) and six-month (Dec/Jun’25) Brent futures spreads are at $0.44/bbl and $1.72/bbl, respectively.

CFTC Predictor: Bulls On Their Way Out?

In addition to our regular Monday CFTC COT analysis report, Onyx Insight will publish its own in-house CFTC COT forecast ahead of the official Friday report. The model forecasts changes in long and short positions using machine learning, utilising Onyx’s proprietary data.

The Officials: Davey the Dated Donkey pushed off a cliff

The North Sea was brutal today. The Dated Donkey got killed and went subterranean. In yet another instance of Dated Brent and components acting wildly this year, Forties traded below the zero line, after bidding went as high as +$2.20 in early August. The instrument needs a proper think-through before too many producers and consumers buffeted by the volatility shout out words starting with F or M, which we could take for Fiddling and Manipulation. Maybe there are other nouns. Diffs got smashed as Shell kept offering a mid-Nov Forties down to -5c below Dated. It dangled for a while before Glencore lifted it. They had to think before going for the bargain. The differential collapse contrasted with a Brent flat price that only moved upwards by 25c. There was one other trade in the window: Equinor lifted an early Nov CIF Ekofisk at +$1.55 over Dated from BP. What’s driving Shell to send the physical diff down? We don’t know, but it worked!

European Window: Brent Climbs To $74.32/bbl

The Dec’24 Brent futures contract strengthened marginally this afternoon, trading at $73.96/bbl at 12:00 BST and reaching $74.20/bbl at 17:50 BST (time of writing). We saw volatility in price action throughout the afternoon amid the release of the IEA October oil market report, alongside concerns of conflict escalation in the Middle East. In the news today, the IEA has released their oil market report for October, showing global oil demand is set to increase by just 862kb/d this year due to decelerating demand in China. This latest estimate is down from the 903kb/d forecast published in the September IEA report. In other news, Israeli troops have begun clearing landmines near Golan Heights, signalling a potential expansion of ground operations against Hezbollah for the first time further east along Lebanon’s border, according to Reuters. Finally, Russian refinery maintenance has pushed the country’s oil exports to their highest level in three months. Average oil exports inched up by 7kb/d to 3.33mb/d in the four weeks to 13 Oct, as per data compiled by Bloomberg. At the time of writing, the front month (Dec/Jan’25) and six-month (Dec/Jun’25) Brent futures spreads are at $0.37/bbl and $1.53/bbl, respectively.

The Officials: All eyes on the US

After Monday evening’s plummet, Brent flat price continued to cool a little today. It closed Asian trading at $74.17/bbl and looks nearly ready to move lower again. Not quite yet though, as Brent appears to have found some support around the $74/bbl mark. The scale of the price drop following the Washington Post headline demonstrates that the market is still very nervous about any Middle East-centred headlines, although it has largely calmed down from overhyped fears that the passage of tankers through the Strait of Hormuz could be disrupted. Look back to the Tanker War in the 1980s, no one would want this, but it didn’t stop the flow of oil anyway.

Overnight & Singapore Window: Brent Falls Below $74/bbl

The Dec’24 Brent futures contract continued to weaken this morning, falling from $74.80/bbl at 08:25 BST to briefly dropping below $74/bbl at 10:20 BST. While the benchmark crude futures contract found support here, it fell to $73.88/bbl at 11:35 BST (time of writing).

The Officials: Dated Donkey can’t catch a break!

Markets took a moment to recalibrate today, following last night’s major dump on the story that Israel would not strike Iranian oil. Brent flat price crossed into the 73 handle we’ve been awaiting and closed the day at $73.73/bbl. Today had another very offered window as the Dated Donkey keeps getting smacked. BP, Glencore and Total offered down Ekofisk, while Shell and Glencore offered Forties, with Glencore offering a mid Nov Forties down to +46c over Dated. The physical diffs got spanked, from +$1.05 on Friday to +46c yesterday, and took another pounding today. The whole CFD curve slumped into contango, with balweek falling 54c from yesterday to -31c. Next week’s CFD fell 49c on the day too to -51c.

European Window: Brent Futures Rises To $74.20/bbl

The Dec’24 Brent futures contract strengthened marginally this afternoon, trading at $73.96/bbl at 12:00 BST and reaching $74.20/bbl at 17:50 BST (time of writing). We saw volatility in price action throughout the afternoon amid the release of the IEA October oil market report, alongside concerns of conflict escalation in the Middle East. In the news today, the IEA has released their oil market report for October, showing global oil demand is set to increase by just 862kb/d this year due to decelerating demand in China. This latest estimate is down from the 903kb/d forecast published in the September IEA report. In other news, Israeli troops have begun clearing landmines near Golan Heights, signalling a potential expansion of ground operations against Hezbollah for the first time further east along Lebanon’s border, according to Reuters. Finally, Russian refinery maintenance has pushed the country’s oil exports to their highest level in three months. Average oil exports inched up by 7kb/d to 3.33mb/d in the four weeks to 13 Oct, as per data compiled by Bloomberg. At the time of writing, the front month (Dec/Jan’25) and six-month (Dec/Jun’25) Brent futures spreads are at $0.37/bbl and $1.53/bbl, respectively.

Dated Brent Report – A (North) Sea of Bears

The water has been anything but calm here in the North Sea, with the Dated Brent complex surging up into October amid a more robust futures complex and supported physical differential.

The Officials: Oil off the chopping block?

Traders live and die (financially) by the sword of their decisions. And it has been like this: hear War, buy! Hear Peace, sell! Hear economic news, hmm change that channel and let’s watch the War TV station. Here come the rumours… like Netanyahu promising not to hit Iran’s cities, nuclear plants, nor oil installations. (Can you trust him?) And the overbought market faints. Brent prices correct to the $73+ level. The drop sets the stage for the next uptick and just in time as Israel sort of denies any of the above. It is a ride with certain outcomes. The main players’ economies are facing headwinds and commodity prices reflect that from iron ore to oil. Geopolitics is red hot and any shooting will invite more shooting and this means, buy. But, but, but, the US does not want any shooting and neither do Europe’s main actors. They are financially too wobbly and the US elections means pressure on Israel not to shoot. Make your bets, people, but the outcomes are clear.

Onyx Alpha: Bear Necessities

Another week brings another selection of new trade ideas from Onyx Research, this time looking at trades in fuel oil, gasoline and propane swaps. Our weekly Onyx Alpha report presents speculative and hedging trades based on technical analysis and data-driven tradecraft methods on Onyx Commitment of Traders (COT) and Flux Financials data.

Overnight & Singapore Window: Brent Falls To $73.58/bbl

The Dec’24 Brent futures contract showed weakness throughout the morning, trading at $78.09/bbl at 07:00 BST and falling to just above the $77.00/bbl handle at 11:15 BST (time of writing). Price action has been weak amid a continuing lack of confidence in China’s economic stimulus to combat deflation and increases in Libyan crude output. In the news today, the National Oil Corporation (NOC) stated that Libyan crude production has recovered to 1.3mb/d, reaching levels seen before the political dispute over Libya’s central bank. In other news, the US said it will send US troops to Israel along with an advanced anti-missile system. US President Biden has stated that this decision was meant to “defend Israel”, according to Reuters. US officials have yet to announce how quickly their forces will be deployed. Finally, China’s first ultra-deepwater field, Deep Sea 1, is reported to have produced 9 billion cubic meters of natural gas and 900,000 cubic meters of oil to date, as per Xinhua. This development comes as the China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) seeks to reduce the country’s reliance on foreign hydrocarbons. At the time of writing, the front month (Dec/Jan’25) and six-month (Dec/Jun’25) Brent futures spreads are at $0.38/bbl and $1.80/bbl, respectively.

The Officials: The Dated Donkey gets smacked!

The Dated Donkey got whacked, and all the candy fell out. If you are short! The North Sea window was super offered with Glencore, BP and Totsa all trying to shift North Sea grades, and values got smoked! Incinerated really, and almost back to where the values should be if the market is long, which it is! This was very evident with the offer price of Forties. Glencore offered Forties down to +$0.75 over Dated, far below Gunvor’s bid at +$1.15 on Friday. Gunvor where are you when the Dated Donkey needs you? BP also piled in and was offering down a CIF Ekofisk to +$1.80 over Dated. Totsa didn’t miss out on the action and jumped in, offering down a FOB Ekofisk to Dated +$1.25, far lower than BPs offer for +$1.95 over Dated on Friday. But no one found any takers. According to traders, “the physical diffs got smoked”, falling to around 50c from over a buck on Friday. This week’s CFDs got demolished, falling from 47c before the window to just 7c after.

European Window: Brent Strengthens Slightly To $77.36/bbl

The Dec’24 Brent futures contract strengthened slightly this afternoon, trading at $77.27/bbl at 12:00 BST and moving up to $77.36/bbl at 17:15 BST (time of writing). Despite a mid-afternoon rally to $78.10/bbl at 14:50 BST, price action saw downward pressure amid OPEC’s cut to their oil demand forecast. In the news today, OPEC, in their Oct’24 monthly oil market report, has reduced their forecast for global oil demand growth from 2.03mb/d to 1.93mb/d for 2024, as per Reuters. Poor Chinese demand accounted for most of this reduction, trimmed down by OPEC from 650kb/d to 580kb/d in the report. In other news, Israeli forces have intensified their strikes on north Gaza, shifting their focus to the city of Jabalia. At least 10 people were killed in an Israeli attack on a food distribution centre in the city, according to Palestinian medics. Meanwhile, in China, the Chinese People’s Liberation Army (PLA) has begun air force, navy, and army drills in the Taiwan Strait. Senior Captain Li Xi of the PLA said this display serves “as a stern warning to separatist acts of Taiwan independence forces”. Finally, Algeria is set to announce a new oil and gas licensing round, in which majors including Exxon, Chevron, Eni, and Sinopec are expected to bid, according to Reuters. At the time of writing, the front month (Dec/Jan’25) and six-month (Dec/Jun’25) Brent futures spreads are at $0.42/bbl and $1.85/bbl, respectively.

Futures Report: Demand vs Supply

This week, the Brent futures complex witnessed volatility amid the dichotomy between rising geopolitical tensions in the Middle East and nervousness surrounding oil demand growth in China, the world’s second-largest oil consumer. In the Middle East, the atmosphere remains tense as the world worriedly waits to see whether Israel will attack Iranian oil and nuclear infrastructure following Iran’s firing of over 180 ballistic missiles on 01 Oct in response to Israel expanding the war into Lebanon. The US has reportedly sent US troops to Israel along with an advanced anti-missile system in an attempt to “defend Israel”, adding to concerns of a significant escalation of the conflict. On the other hand, sentiment remains subdued due to China’s beleaguered economy and uninspiring fiscal reforms announced by the government. The market long awaited the Chinese Finance Minister Lan Fo’an’s comments on further stimulus packages on 12 Oct. While the ministry pledged to “significantly increase” debt to revive the economy, it did not mention an official nominal value of the fiscal package, leaving financial markets unsettled.

CFTC Weekly: A Bear-ren Market?

In the week to 08 Oct, managed by money positions saw mixed interest across the crude futures, with funds’ net positioning in Brent far more extreme. In Brent, money managers added a massive 75.7mb to long positions and closed 50.8mb of shorts, resulting in a net increase of 126.5mb w/w, reflecting a bullish outlook. WTI saw funds remove 7.8mb of short positions while cutting longs by 13.7mb, bringing the long-to-short ratio up to 3.15:1.00 from 2.99:1.00 the previous week. We saw combined money managed long positioning in Brent and WTI futures increase by 62.0mb (+17.0%) while combined short positioning decreased by around 58.7mb (-28.6%) for the week ending 08 Oct.

The Officials: Can China find a policy middle ground?

After losing steam on Friday, Dubai is starting to shed some of its physical premium. Trafigura and fellow sellers in the window are back in control. Totsa couldn’t grab enough partials to keep the physical premium above the $1.68/bbl average this month, shedding 18c since yesterday. BP, Phillips66, and Exxon were keen sellers, with Mitsui and Totsa on the buy side. Mitsui’s bidding did land them a cargo of Upper Zakum following convergence with Trafigura for the second convergence this month after Totsa netted another Upper Zakum from Exxon on Friday. The physical differentials are coming in below the current month average and also below September’s average. But a trader still considered them strong as the markets are heavily backwardated. ‘All this talk about a weak China and a softening economy is not doing much to the price,’ he said. ‘The more nothing happens, the more nothing happens,’ said another trader. ‘It was a soft start for dated as well, prices are soft but nothing much is happening,’ he concluded.

Overnight & Singapore Window: Brent Falls to $77.00/bbl

The Dec’24 Brent futures contract showed weakness throughout the morning, trading at $78.09/bbl at 07:00 BST and falling to just above the $77.00/bbl handle at 11:15 BST (time of writing). Price action has been weak amid a continuing lack of confidence in China’s economic stimulus to combat deflation and increases in Libyan crude output. In the news today, the National Oil Corporation (NOC) stated that Libyan crude production has recovered to 1.3mb/d, reaching levels seen before the political dispute over Libya’s central bank. In other news, the US said it will send US troops to Israel along with an advanced anti-missile system. US President Biden has stated that this decision was meant to “defend Israel”, according to Reuters. US officials have yet to announce how quickly their forces will be deployed. Finally, China’s first ultra-deepwater field, Deep Sea 1, is reported to have produced 9 billion cubic meters of natural gas and 900,000 cubic meters of oil to date, as per Xinhua. This development comes as the China National Offshore Oil Corporation (CNOOC) seeks to reduce the country’s reliance on foreign hydrocarbons. At the time of writing, the front month (Dec/Jan’25) and six-month (Dec/Jun’25) Brent futures spreads are at $0.38/bbl and $1.80/bbl, respectively.

The Officials: A very flat price for Brent

Nobody seems to want to hold any additional risk going into the weekend. Price action looked as flat as an ironing board throughout the day, oscillating safely within the $78/bbl range. ‘It was soft day since the morning,’ said a trader. ‘Some people were selling the end of October period, I think that’s where the action will be,’ the trader added. But otherwise the market was dull with minor up and downs, until Brent finally broke through the $79/bbl level shortly before 15:30 BST. It stalled just below the $79.50/bbl mark and closed at $79.14/bbl.

European Window: Brent Inches Up To $79.04/bbl

This afternoon, the Dec’24 Brent futures contract showed gradual upward movement, trading at $78.65/bbl at 12:00 BST and inching up to $79.04/bbl at 17:30 BST (time of writing). We saw some volatility in price action, with an intraday high of $79.47/bbl just before 16:00 BST, amid further conflict in Lebanon and the release of a Platts survey showing an overall decline in OPEC+ oil production. In the news today, the United Nations said that two of its peacekeepers were injured by explosions near its Naqoura headquarters in southern Lebanon, prompting criticism of Israel from European governments such as Germany and France, according to Bloomberg. In other news, the Platts OPEC+ survey has shown a 500kb/d drop in oil production for September, owing to the halt in Libyan output and improved compliance from Iraq. Lastly, Russia’s Omsk refinery, the country’s largest by production volumes, has increased crude processing by 4% y/y from January to September, according to the state-owned giant Gazprom. The company claims the Omsk refinery processed almost 426kb/d of oil throughout 2023. At the time of writing, the front month (Dec/Jan’25) and six-month (Dec/Jun’25) Brent futures spreads are at $0.49/bbl and $2.28/bbl, respectively.

The Officials: Calm before the storm?

Dubai’s physical premium remained almost unchanged, just 1c up at $1.84. Dubai’s run out of steam after the mania of the last couple of weeks while everybody’s been running about like headless chickens on RedBull. This morning, paper has been “like watching paint dry” for traders who are, in some ways, glad for a hiatus in the carnage of recent weeks. In crude, in products, it doesn’t matter, everyone’s waiting with bated breath. We’ll see if that tranquillity lasts or if Middle Eastern belligerents decide to kick up a ruckus again. It’s a tense atmosphere as everyone waits for Israel’s next move.

Overnight & Singapore Window: Brent Weakens Slightly To $78.90/bbl

The Dec’24 Brent futures contract saw support this morning, trading at $77.13/bbl at 07:00 BST and strengthening to $77.72/bbl around 11:20 BST (time of writing). Price action saw upward movement this morning amid mounting concerns of a potential Israeli strike on Iran and expected supply disruption due to Hurricane Milton. In the news today, following a statement from Israeli Defence Minister Yoav Gallant warning that any retaliation against Iran would be “lethal” and “surprising”, Israel has continued their airstrikes in southern Lebanon today, resulting in the death of 5 emergency workers according to the Lebanese health ministry. In other news, Exxon is planning to increase its crude oil production offshore Guyana by 18kb/d, according to Bloomberg. The increase in output is due to come from Exxon’s Unity platform, whose total capacity will increase to 270kb/d from 250kb/d, on the condition that approval from local authorities has been obtained and necessary risk assessments are complete. Finally, Saudi Aramco is expected to provide 42-43mb of crude supplies to Chinese customers for November-loading, compared to around 44mb for October, as per Bloomberg. At the time of writing, the front month (Dec/Jan’25) and six-month (Dec/Jun’25) Brent futures spreads are at $0.53/bbl and $2.09/bbl, respectively.

The Officials: Fight or flight

All the traders and even we are kept waiting for Israel’s ‘decisive’ action in response to Iran’s missile bombardment. Words come easily, but the situation is difficult for Israel, countries in the region, US, Europe and everybody. Honour and pride demand a powerful reaction by Israel, but a non-emotional approach coupled with practicalities such as not stepping on American toes prior to the presidential election weigh heavily. We’ve learned to be patient following avowals of retribution and retaliation in the Middle East. In any case, the market just can’t get the idea out of its head, and this anxiety sent Brent back towards the $79/bbl mark.