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Brent Forecast Review: 20th December 2024

The front-month (Feb’25) Brent is on track for a weekly decline, as price action has fallen by 2% to $72.50/bbl by 13:30 GMT (time of writing). Various factors have pressured crude prices this week, including more hawkish signals from the

COT Report: Fuel-tide Greetings

See all the updates across the barrel in this week’s Onyx Commitment of Traders report, as well as six contracts to watch. 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 Global Oil Balance

Update to Onyx Global Oil Balance: this update’s key revision revolves around supply, with lower non-OPEC supply growth in 2025 and an upward readjustment in Iraqi crude production following methodological changes by Petro-Logistics SA. Following a comprehensive review of Iraq’s crude balance, Petro-Logistics SA has reclassified “other” refinery feedstocks as crude oil, accounting for most of the revision in the country’s output.

This report contains Onyx Advisory’s Global Oil Liquids Balance, with projections of world oil supply (including OPEC crude oil production) and world oil demand to derive implied global oil stock changes by quarter.

The report is split into two parts: a detailed global balance on page 3 and a summary balance on page 4, which shows individual OPEC country crude production assumptions over the forecast period. The OPEC crude production level is contrasted with the ‘Call on OPEC’ crude to obtain the implied global stock change.

Historical data are sourced from the IEA, while Petro-logistics SA data are used for OPEC crude production.

Brent Forecast: 16th December 2024

The front-month (Feb’25) Brent futures contract has seen a supportive performance in the past week, rising to highs of $74.50/bbl on 13 December – but has come off to the $74/bbl level on 16 December (time of writing). This week,

Overnight & Singapore Window: Brent Weakens to $73.80/bbl Levels

The Feb’25 Brent Futures contract experienced a weaker morning session, trading down from around $74.20/bbl at 07:00 GMT to $73.94/bbl at 10:35 GMT (time of writing) as traders take profit and await the Fed’s interest rate decision, with market expectations of a 25bp cut. In headlines Libya’s largest refinery, Zawiya (120 kb/d capacity), suffered fires over the weekend caused by gunfire during armed clashes, prompting the NOC to declare force majeure on Sunday. While the fires were controlled by Monday, the force majeure remains in place amid urges for the government to end clashes to prevent further damage and potential loss of life. This incident underscores ongoing risks to Libya’s oil industry, despite recent production gains, with output reaching 1.59 mb/d in October after resolving earlier political disputes and blockades. In other news, China’s refined oil consumption peaked in 2023 at 399 million metric tons (approximately 8 mb/d) and is projected to decline by 1.3% in 2024, according to CNPC’s Economics & Technology Research Institute. This decline is largely attributed to the rapid expansion of the EV sector, with forecasts suggesting that by 2035, EVs will make up half of the country’s car fleet, alongside increasing adoption of alternative fuels for trucks. At the time of writing, the Feb/Mar’25 and Feb/Aug’25 Brent spreads are at $0.38/bbl and $1.68/bbl, respectively.

Refinery Margins Report

Click below to explore our new Refinery Margins Report, offering a clear, detailed analysis of weekly and monthly shifts in key regional refinery margins. This report enables readers to pinpoint where margins are tightening or loosening across regions, drawing on proprietary yields and our leading market share in swaps to build a world class financial refinery margin—essential for understanding the evolving landscape of regional refinery economics.

Brent Forecast Review: 13th December 2024

Iran v Israel, again On Monday, we forecast that the front-month Brent futures contract would end the week between $71 and $74/bbl. As of Friday, 8:30am GMT (time of writing), the contract is trading at around $73.60/bbl, well within this

Overnight & Singapore Window: Brent Strengthens To $74.10/bbl

he Feb’25 Brent futures contract strengthened this morning from $73.45/bbl at 07:00 GMT up to $74.10/bbl around 10:50 GMT (time of writing). Crude oil prices saw support amid reports that Russia attacked Ukrainian energy facilities this morning, targeting power substations and gas infrastructure, industry sources told Reuters. In the news today, Russian forces are advancing towards the Ukrainian city of Pokrovsk, now focusing on consolidating control of the Donetsk region in eastern Ukraine where Russia occupies over 60% of the territory, as per Reuters. In other news, Canadian oil producers plan to hike output next year, with Cenovus setting a growth target of 4.4% between 805kb/d and 845kb/d, driven by the start-up of the Narrows Lake oil sands project. Suncor also aims to boost production in 2025 by 4.4% to between 810kb/d and 840kb/d. Finally, Nigeria’s Seplat Energy is set to revive hundreds of Exxon’s idle Nigerian oil wells after completing its purchase of Exxon’s onshore oil and gas assets in the West African nation, according to Bloomberg. Seplat plans to increase oil output by 200kb/d, with CEO Samson Ezugworie stating in a Thursday interview that only 200 of around 600 blocks are currently producing. At the time of writing, the Feb/Mar’25 and Feb/Aug’25 Brent futures spreads stand at $0.37/bbl and $1.58/bbl, respectively.

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

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

COT Report: Oil I Want for Christmas is You

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

Onyx Global Oil Balance

This report contains Onyx Advisory’s Global Oil Liquids Balance, with projections of world oil supply (including OPEC crude oil production) and world oil demand to derive implied global oil stock changes by quarter.

The report is split into two parts: a detailed global balance on page 3 and a summary balance on page 4, which shows individual OPEC country crude production assumptions over the forecast period. The OPEC crude production level is contrasted with the ‘Call on OPEC’ crude to obtain the implied global stock change.

Historical data are sourced from the IEA, while Petro-logistics SA data are used for OPEC crude production.

Brent Forecast: 9th December 2024

Instability in the Middle East The front-month (February 2025) Brent futures contract weakened below $71/bbl on 06 Dec, dipping under the boundary of the symmetric triangle within which the M1 futures contract has oscillated since September (attached). As of Monday,

Refinery Margins Report

Click below to explore our new Refinery Margins Report, offering a clear, detailed analysis of weekly and monthly shifts in key regional refinery margins. This report enables readers to pinpoint where margins are tightening or loosening across regions, drawing on proprietary yields and our leading market share in swaps to build a world class financial refinery margin—essential for understanding the evolving landscape of regional refinery economics.

Brent Review: 2nd December 2024

TARGET: $70.00/bbl – $73.50/bbl PRICE: $71.65/bbl OPEC+: Much Ado About Nothing The front-month February 2025 Brent Friday morning was roughly where it started the week, with a brief rally in between. At the time of writing, Brent was trading at

COT Report: Bulls Remain Cautious

See all the updates across the barrel in this week’s Onyx Commitment of Traders report, as well as six contracts to watch. 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

Brent Forecast: 2nd December 2024

The front-month February 2025 Brent contract kicked off Monday by rebounding from last Friday’s lows, trading towards $72.70/bbl at the time of writing. However, the path of least resistance for the flat price this week is still one of weakness

Refinery Margins Report

Click below to explore our new Refinery Margins Report, offering a clear, detailed analysis of weekly and monthly shifts in key regional refinery margins. This report enables readers to pinpoint where margins are tightening or loosening across regions, drawing on proprietary yields and our leading market share in swaps to build a world class financial refinery margin—essential for understanding the evolving landscape of regional refinery economics.

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: Trading Thanksgiving

See all the updates across the barrel in this week’s Onyx Commitment of Traders report, as well as six contracts to watch. 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

Brent Forecast: 25th November 2024

The Jan’25 Brent futures contract concluded last week on a solid note, closing at $75.20/bbl on 22 Nov off the back of escalating tension around the Ukraine war. Prices softened to $74.35/bbl this morning, where they found support briefly, but

Onyx CFTC Style COT Reports – 25 Nov 2024

Onyx’s in-house CTA positioning model determines the net positioning of CTAs in a range of futures benchmarks. The week ending 25 Nov saw increasing bullish sentiment as net positioning increased across the major oil futures benchmarks. Total net positioning rose from -118k on 18 Nov to -52k by 25 Nov, the highest level since 16 Oct, with middle distillates leading the way. The product with the most bullish positioning is now ICE gasoil, which surpassed Heating Oil on 18 Nov and rose to -4k by 25 Nov. The lower net positions are shared by RBOB, Brent, and WTI. Overall net positioning has struggled in the second half of this year and has not been positive since mid-July. It remains to be seen if the current increase in bullish positioning can be sustained.

Refinery Margins Report

Click below to explore our new Refinery Margins Report, offering a clear, detailed analysis of weekly and monthly shifts in key regional refinery margins. This report enables readers to pinpoint where margins are tightening or loosening across regions, drawing on proprietary yields and our leading market share in swaps to build a world class financial refinery margin—essential for understanding the evolving landscape of regional refinery economics.

COT Report: To Buy or not to Buy

See all the updates across the barrel in this week’s Onyx Commitment of Traders report, as well as six contracts to watch. 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

Brent Forecast: 18th November 2024

The Jan’25 Brent future is trading near recent bottoms, with a wedge forming with lower highs from early October and a quite weak momentum in the bear trend shown by a negative but small MACD differential. We anticipate a short

Refinery Margins Report

Click below to explore our new Refinery Margins Report, offering a clear, detailed analysis of weekly and monthly shifts in key regional refinery margins. This report enables readers to pinpoint where margins are tightening or loosening across regions, drawing on proprietary yields and our leading market share in swaps to build a world class financial refinery margin—essential for understanding the evolving landscape of regional refinery economics.

Edge Updates

The Officials: Brent bounds beyond $76!

At last! Salvation for Equinor! It finally shifted some Johan Sverdrup by smashing Totsa’s offer for a 13-15 Jan cargo once it reached Dated -$0.80. Equinor had gone quiet in the second half of December having failed to garner much interest in its many JS offerings. The busyness of December’s windows saw the highest volumes of crude shipped since July, at 1.99 mil b/d according to ship tracking data. Traders didn’t waste any time getting down to business in 2025, though. It wasn’t quite as chaotic as the early December windows but it wasn’t just a start-of-month standoff either. BP wanted to get in on the action too, offering both Forties and Brent. Once Gunvor had picked up the British major’s 24-28 Jan offer at $1.25 over Dated, it withdrew its own Forties offer. Gunvor seemed indecisive, offering and lifting Forties. Not long after Gunvor lifted BP’s offer, BP seemed content with its day’s labour and withdrew its Brent offer. For February loading cargoes, quality premiums were increased across grades: Oseberg was bumped 10c, Ekofisk up 15c, while Troll rose 2c.

Early European Window: Brent Rises To $76.40/bbl

The Mar ’25 Brent futures contract continued to see support this afternoon as it rose from around $75.70/bbl at mid-day to $76.40/bbl at 17.15 GMT (time of writing). China’s manufacturing PMI dipped to 50.5 in December, missing forecasts, as output slowed and export orders shrank amid weak demand and tariff risks. While services and construction showed improvement, this weaker data could prompt the government to boost stimulus measures. Iran’s Deputy Foreign Minister, Majid Takht-Ravanchi, is visiting India for talks on resuming energy trade, which has plummeted since US sanctions in 2018 forced Indian refiners to stop buying Iranian oil. Bilateral trade fell from $17 billion in 2018-19 to $2.3 billion in 2022-23. US crude oil stocks decreased by 1.18 mb for the week ending 27 Dec, compared to a 4.24 mb drop the previous week and below the forecasted decline of 2.75 mb, according to the EIA. The latest Dallas Fed Energy Survey showed Dallas’ energy sector grew in Q4, with activity rising to 6.0 from -5.9 in Q3 and outlook improving to 7.1. Oil production was steady, while gas production edged lower. At the time of writing, the Mar/Apr ’25 and Mar/Sep ’25 Brent futures spreads stand at $0.49/bbl and $2.40/bbl, respectively.

The Officials: Off to a flying start!

Welcome to Volume 2 of The Officials! 2024 was a big year for us, establishing our report and adding numerous key benchmarks, even branching out into crypto and launching our own dollar index – the ODX Asia™. Expect more exciting things in 2025, including our upcoming price discovery for Dated Brent and additional commodities, to be revealed… With a New Year, do Brent futures have a new lease of life? Asia opened up and pushed us over the $75/bbl mark for the first time since 25 November. Content with a hard day’s work, Asia gradually eased off through the rest of the session, with Brent eventually closing at $74.77/bbl. However, the foray above 75 laid the foundations for Europe to fire flat price towards $75.70/bbl at around 10:00 GMT. The mid-70s are back – we just hope the hairstyles don’t come back too.

Overnight & Singapore Window: Brent Supported At $75.60/bbl

The Mar’25 Brent futures contract was supported this morning, rising from around $74.80/bbl at 0630 GMT up to $75.60/bbl at 1050 GMT (time of writing). Market sentiment saw an optimistic start to the new year, potentially bolstered by expectations that China may introduce additional measures in 2025 to stimulate economic growth. In the news today, the International Longshoremen’s Association (ILA), a union representing cargo handlers at every major Eastern US and Gulf Coast port, is threatening to strike on 15 January, according to Bloomberg. Following a three-day strike in early October, the ILA agreed to delay further action until mid-January, now pushing for stronger protections against labour automation at ports. In other news, after the suspension of the Ukrainian natural gas transit deal, Moldova’s breakaway region of Transdniestria has cut off supply of heating and hot water to households, with Russia previously pumping about 2 billion cubic metres of gas per year to Transdniestria, as per Reuters. European front-month gas prices rose 4.3% on the first trading day of the year, the highest since October 2023, Bloomberg revealed. Finally, India’s gasoline and diesel demand saw respective increases of 9.8% and 4.9% in December y/y, according to the Economic Times. The report attributed the increase in demand to holiday travel, citing petrol sales of three state-owned fuel retailers. At the time of writing, the Mar/Apr’25 and Mar/Sep’25 Brent futures spreads stand at $0.48/bbl and $2.23/bbl, respectively.

The Officials: December monthly review (Euro)

In April we were flirting with the low $90s. Then on three occasions in H2 we’ve teased the high $60s. But Brent flat price has found its comfort zone and settled into the lower half of the $70s range throughout December. It’s been a year of two halves in terms of prices, with China’s wobble and OPEC quota delays and deliberations key drivers of price moves. Geopolitical flare ups have played their role too, with major price surges in April and October highlighting that. The rate cutting cycle that has characterised global monetary policy looks set to continue into next year.

Early European Window: Brent Declines To $73.90/bbl

The Mar’25 Brent futures contract was initially supported around the $74.50/bbl level this morning at 0800 GMT, before falling to $73.90/bbl at 1310 GMT (time of writing). In the news today, a Ukrainian drone attack in western Russia caused a fuel spill and fire at an oil depot according to Vasily Anokhin, the governor of Russia’s Smolensk region. Meanwhile, Gazprom said that it would pump a reduced volume of gas to Europe via Ukraine today, as per Reuters. This comes as the Ukrainian gas transit deal is expected to expire on 1 January, following Russian President Vladimir Putin’s 26 Dec statement that there was insufficient time this year to negotiate a new agreement. In other news, Iran has appointed Ali-Mohammad Mousavi as its representative to OPEC, replacing Afshin Javan. Mousavi currently serves as Deputy Minister for International Affairs and Commerce at the Iranian Oil Ministry. Finally, President Xi Jinping said in a speech today that China’s 2024 GDP growth is projected to expand around 5%, reported by Xinhua. According to Bloomberg, economists forecast an expansion of 4.8% for China’s GDP this year. At the time of writing, the Mar/Apr’25 and Mar/Sep’25 Brent futures spreads stand at $0.41/bbl and $1.94/bbl, respectively.

The Officials: December monthly review (Asia)

What a year it has been! We tested low 90s and we also tested high 60s. But we are closing the year definitely towards the lower end of the range still trying to secure a $75.00/bbl beachhead for Brent as we enter the New Year. The year started with some promise for producers, as the market flirted with the low 90s trying to climb into a three-digit market… but it was not to be. Even so, Dubai ended the year on a high, with Totsa engaging in a window-based version of the classic gameshow ‘Supermarket Sweep’, hoovering up all the supply it could get its mitts on. In Ancient Greece, there was the Minotaur and nowadays in the Dubai Market there is the Major Taureau . The extremely strong Dubai physical premium we’ve seen – even reaching above $2 – in the final trading week of December puts the Saudis in a bit of an OSP pickle. How will Aramco’s leadership react to the market signals it has to contend with, even if they’re distorted, and the long-term symbiotic relationship with their customers? We’ll find out soon enough…

Overnight & Singapore Window: Brent Remains Supported

The Mar’25 Brent futures contract continued to strengthen in the early hours of this morning, reaching a peak of over $74.70/bbl at 0600 GMT before softening to around $74.48/bbl at 0800 GMT (time of writing) as it failed to sustain momentum to break out above the upper Bollinger band (daily), although it remains close. China’s factory activity grew more slowly in December despite recent stimulus efforts and rising trade risks. According to official data, the PMI edged down to 50.1 from 50.3 in November, staying above the 50 mark for the third consecutive month, signalling continued manufacturing expansion. Heating degree days, an indicator of energy demand for space heating, are projected to increase to 499 in the US over the next two weeks, up from the 399 forecast on Friday, according to LSEG. The firm’s meteorologists also predict colder temperatures in Europe in January. The US Treasury was hacked by a Chinese state-sponsored actor through a third-party software provider, BeyondTrust Inc., which reported the breach on Dec. 8. Described as a “major cybersecurity incident,” the attack exploited a key securing a cloud service used by Treasury staff. While China denies the claims, US agencies and forensic experts are investigating, accusing the US of spreading unfounded disinformation. The Nigerian Federal Government, working with the Nigerian Navy, aims to boost crude oil production to 3 mb/d by 2025. Output has already risen to 1.8 mb/d from 1.4 mb/d in 2023. Minister of State for Petroleum, Heineken Lokpobiri, said the newly launched second phase of the operation will be key to achieving this goal. At the time of writing, the Mar/Apr’25 and Mar/Sep’25 Brent futures spreads stand at $0.43/bbl and $2.06/bbl, respectively.

The Officials: Freezing forecast – get the heating on!

The cold is coming. Winter is tightening its icy death grip on both Europe and the US. Early January is forecast to be absolutely chilling, below average temperatures for the time of year. The Arctic temperatures making a beeline for the US will surely bolster heating demand as people rush to turn up the thermostat. US Midwest temperatures are expected to be near 12 degrees Celsius lower than their 30-year normal in early January, while temperatures in London are likely to fall by up to 10 degrees Celsius by the end of this week. And markets have reacted, with both Henry Hub and TTF futures jumping on the expectation for intense heating demand.

European Window: Brent Continues to Strengthen

The Mar’25 Brent futures contract rose this afternoon, from under $74.00/bbl at mid-day to $74.45/bbl at 1715 GMT. US SPR crude inventories increased by about 0.3mb last week, reaching 393.6mb. Sour crude rose by 0.3mb to 250.3mb, while sweet crude remained unchanged at 143.3mb. Nigeria’s state-owned National Petroleum Company announced that its second refinery in Warri, located in the southern region, is now operational. The 125 kb/d refinery, under a $898 million rehabilitation since 2021, is now running at 60% capacity, focusing on kerosene, diesel, and naphtha production, according to NNPC CEO Mele Kyari and the presidency. Iran’s non-oil exports surged 18% to $43.14 billion in the first nine months of the Iranian calendar year, driven by a 33% rise in petrochemical exports, totalling $19.7 billion. Export volumes grew 13.77%, while imports reached $50.89 billion, with higher per-ton values despite a drop in weight. China remained the top export market, followed by Iraq, the UAE, and Turkey. The Chicago PMI dropped to 36.9, signalling a deeper-than-expected contraction in the region’s manufacturing sector and potential bearish pressure on the US dollar. This was well below the forecast of 42.7, indicating a sharper slowdown than anticipated. At the time of writing, the Mar/Apr’25 and Mar/Sep’25 Brent futures spreads stand at $0.45/bbl and $2.07/bbl, respectively.

The Officials: Dubai breaks $75!

Totsa drove up the price of Dubai to above $75.00/bbl, the highest price for any benchmark crude in December. Brent
closed the Asian market at $74.09 and WTI further behind at $70.50. Totsa, the Taureau, as we call them, had the horns on
all month, buying and buying and buying Dubai. In December, the French major has bought a total of 33 physical cargoes
in the Dubai window. Upper Zakum is the preferred grade this month, making up 26 cargoes of the total 38. The physical
premium started the month at $0.89 and with one trading day left in the month it reached $2.25/bbl. This premium has
huge implications for the economics of Asian refining as it will surely lead to a huge jump in Saudi OSPs of over $1.00
relative to the current OSPs. The rise in flat price and premiums then affects consumers across many nations, affecting
billions of people, without any exaggeration. Totsa is believed to have reacted and grabbed the opportunity created by extra
import quotas given to selected Chinese buyers.

Overnight & Singapore Window: Brent holds above $73.50/bbl

The Mar’25 Brent futures contract continued to strengthen daily but has been slipping hourly; after gapping higher this morning, it has softened to oscillate around the simple 20-day moving average for the last few hours. Mar’25 fell from a high of $73.90/bbl at 0100 GMT to $73.55/bbl at 1025 GMT. According to several trade sources on Monday, Reuters reported that China has issued at least 152.49 million metric tons of crude oil import quotas to independent refiners in a second batch for 2025. In Nigeria, troops dismantled 66 illegal refining sites and disrupted a network of oil theft operations, according to Major General Edward Buba. Recovered assets included 657,470 litres of stolen crude oil, 127,870 litres of automotive gasoil, and 5,000 litres of dual-purpose kerosene. The UAE’s economy grew 3.6% in the first half of the year, driven by a 4.4% rise in non-oil GDP to Dh660 billion, 75% of the total Dh879.6 billion GDP. Economic diversification, boosted by entrepreneurship, investment, and tourism, fueled the growth, said Minister of Economy Abdulla bin Touq. Bharat Petroleum Corp, an Indian state-run refiner, is turning to Middle Eastern crude to offset the reduced availability of cheaper Russian oil, according to finance head Vetsa Ramakrishna Gupta. Indian refiners, which typically buy Russian oil on the spot market, are struggling to secure 8-10 million barrels for January loading, sources said. At the time of writing, the Mar/Apr’25 and Mar/Sep’25 Brent futures spreads stand at $0.47/bbl and $2.04/bbl, respectively.

The Officials: Flat price seesaws

Traders in the first European session after Christmas were back for more Brent, sending flat price upwards. It even looked ready to challenge the $74 ceiling for the first time since last Thursday, and it finally did, just after 14:00 GMT, peaking at $74.12, before cooling off slightly to close at $73.99/bbl. This range is sticky and flat price is stuck in the mud, lurching between $72 and $74 without being able to break through either conclusively or for more than moments – as we saw again this afternoon. Post-window it slid back down towards $73.70/bbl and then bounced back following the big crude draw reported by the EIA. The further you pull an elastic band, the further it will rebound the other way.

European Window: Brent Set for Weekly Gain

The Mar’25 Brent futures contract witnessed a rangebound afternoon, oscillating between $73.30/bbl and $73.70/bbl, and currently sits at $73.40/bbl at 17:20 GMT (time of writing).

The Officials: Gunfight at the O.K. Corral

Totsa ate everyone up, we would say . They are winning big time, and all the sellers are licking their wounds wishing they had not sold so early. Truly a magnificently engineered play! All the signs were there from the moment the Chinese issued the extra buy crude tender. Now the Taureau is just stomping on the shorts, snorting as it gores them away. If we could give them the orange award for master presseur we would . There were very few Dubai offers late on, just bids flying around like a swarm of confused sparrows as sellers tried to swipe them out of the air. Of the final 9 trades, just 1 was an offer being lifted – by Totsa of course . Naturally, many of the bids swarming the sellers came from Totsa too, but Mercuria and Glencore weren’t going to be left out. The variety of sellers did their best to keep a lid on things but they just couldn’t do it. Look no further than the Dubai physical premium for proof: we know it was strong yesterday, but today the premium soared to $2.16! OMG, we say to the shorts, RIP!

The Officials: Boxing match in Dubai

The European Christmas cheers continued on the first day back after the brief holiday. The positivity sent Brent flat price higher. Brent futures closed the Asian session at $73.85/bbl, $0.93/bbl up on the day. Dubai partials, meanwhile, zoomed up even more settling at $74.55/bbl, a massive $1.26/bbl up! Asia’s stolen a march while Europe’s busy enjoying itself and gorging on mince pies. Totsa is winning big time! And Dubai keeps on going. They say the sky’s the limit… let’s see if that rings true.

The Officials: Silent night in the North Sea

Flat price is vacillating, up and down like some who are already enjoying Christmas. What the hell, the moves are minor, so don’t worry. The window saw a flat price slip, from above $73.30 to below $73, though it found some support in the $72.90s. But it quickly rebounded towards $73.20. It’s like a kid who can’t decide whether to play with the bear or bull action figures it just unwrapped for Christmas. Or someone who had one too many And then it came back down again… After all that choppy window action, Brent ended European trading at $73.17/bbl. Up and down faster than Father Christmas in a chimney!

Early European Window: Brent Trades Below $73

The Mar’25 Brent futures flat price saw a volatile and choppier performance amid thinner liquidity on Tuesday, rising to $73/bbl by 11:20 GMT before selling off by 60c within 15 mins, and is printing $72.74/bbl at 13:15 GMT (time of writing). With trading volumes quieter during the holiday period, price action is expected to fluctuate around current levels in the short term, with traders in a tentative and wait-and-see mode ahead of the new year. In the news, Russian President Vladimir Putin has lifted a 2022 ban on transactions involving Rosneft shares, paving the way for potential sales, including stakes in German refineries, amid ongoing sanctions challenges and interest from Middle Eastern investors. Indian state refiners may turn to Middle Eastern spot crude to offset an 8-10mb shortfall in Russian oil for January, driven by rising Russian domestic demand and OPEC commitments, potentially raising costs due to less favourable economics. Indian Oil Corporation will invest 610 billion rupees ($7 billion) in a naphtha cracker project in Paradip, Odisha, with an initial agreement expected to be signed in January, complementing its existing 300kb/d refinery in the region. Finally, the front (Feb/Mar) and 6-month (Feb/Aug) Brent futures spreads are at $0.40/bbl and $1.92/bbl respectively.

The Officials: Totsa don’t squeeze me tight, it’s Christmas time!

‘Twas the night before Christmas, when all through the house / Not a creature was stirring, not even a mouse. Except Totsa. Totsa was awake and rummaging through the Dubai window looking for cargoes like an excited child sifting through a Christmas stocking on the hunt for chocolate. Buyers and sellers exchanged partial gifts all in good Christmas spirit. Right? And the French were rewarded with another 4 convergences! They got three Upper Zakums: one from each of BP, Exxon and Reliance. Trafi wanted to be different to the rest and nominated an Oman. By our counting, that makes a total of 29 convergences in December in the Dubai window, of which 27(!!) have gone to Totsa. More than one cargo per calendar day and working towards half of the Upper Zakum monthly program. Don’t call it a squeeze, call it a Christmas embrace. Tight we know So far, two other cargoes went to Mitsui and Glencore, who’ve been left to fight for Totsa’s leftovers all month. Thank you to our kind readers for helping to cross-check the data! Singapore friends, you are awesome!

European Window: Brent Falls to $72

The Feb’25 Brent futures flat price continued to slide on Monday afternoon, falling from the $72.70/bbl level at 11:00 GMT to $72/bbl by 16:50 GMT, before finding technical support and bouncing up to $72.12/bbl by 17:20 GMT (time of writing). In the news, India’s crude imports in November saw Middle Eastern oil rise to a 9-month high, accounting for 48%, while Russian oil fell to its lowest share in three quarters at 32%, driven by refinery maintenance and adherence to Middle Eastern supply contracts. Efforts to broker a Gaza ceasefire have gained momentum, with progress on key issues like prisoner exchanges and troop deployment, but major sticking points, including the duration of the ceasefire and the broader terms for ending the war, remain unresolved amid dire humanitarian conditions in the region. According to an EIA article, improved operational efficiency and technological advancements have enabled U.S. crude oil production in the Lower 48 states to reach a record 11.3 mb/d in November 2024, despite a declining rig count, with productivity per rig expected to rise further in 2025 due to continued innovation and new pipeline capacity. US SPR crude inventories rose by 0.3mb w/w to 393.3mb last week. Finally, the front (Feb/Mar) and 6-month (Feb/Aug) Brent futures spreads are at $0.29/bbl and $1.55/bbl respectively.

The Officials: Last minute NS Christmas shopping

It was a flat price slip and slide. Throughout the Asian session Brent flat price remained supported just above $73 before Europe came in and put an end to that. By the window, we were even troubling the low $72 range. Team America didn’t even bother turning up to try and arrest the downward momentum, which saw Brent end far down on the day, at $72.06/bbl. Perhaps they’re already tucking into the mince pies.

The Officials: Dubai to the sky!

Totsa continues to vacuum clean the Dubai floor. Anything the market throws at them, Totsa sucks up. And they are
winning; the premium is jumping. The food fight has moved from the North Sea window to the Dubai window. And it’s getting
messy with Totsa fully dominating the market. More bids, more lifting… it’s become a deeply entrenched pattern of the
Dubai windows for months now. An offer from BP, they’ll take it. Something pops up from Trafi, they’ll snatch that. Unipec
or Exxon places an offer and it’s bound to get a hammering from Totsa. All the sellers seemed to get their fair share of
smacking. Only a few sellers got to return the favour by hitting a Totsa bid, but Vitol, Exxon and Equinor all managed to
squeeze it into their busy schedules. The French zeal saw Totsa gain yet more convergences: one each from Phillips and
Trafi, which both handed out Upper Zakum. By our counting, that gives Totsa 23 convergences so far in December – not
quite on par with November, but still a vast volume. The market is a bit dry and premia react – the Dubai physical premium
surging 97c yesterday to $1.12 today!

Overnight & Singapore Window: Brent Falls Below $73/bbl

The Feb’25 Brent futures flat price traded around the $73.30/bbl level overnight Monday before falling by nearly 50c and below $73/bbl within half an hour, trading $72.94/bbl at 10:00 GMT. In the news, a second drone attack in a week targeted Russia’s Oryol fuel depot on 22 Dec, causing a fire that was quickly extinguished, amid a series of Ukrainian strikes on strategic energy infrastructure. Russia’s Druzhba pipeline resumed crude supply to Belarus on 21 Dec after a two-day halt due to a technical issue, with operations now reported as normal. China’s CNOOC announced the start of production at its Suizhong 36-2 oilfield block development in Liaoning Bay, Bohai Sea, with plans for 21 wells and peak output projected at 9,700 barrels of oil equivalent per day by 2026. Methane emissions in the Permian Basin, the heart of US oil production, fell 26% in 2023 as producers responded to regulatory pressures, societal demands, and economic incentives, though concerns linger over the sustainability of progress under potential policy rollbacks. Finally, the front (Feb/Mar) and 6-month (Feb/Aug) Brent futures spreads are at $0.37/bbl and $1.79/bbl respectively.

European Window: Brent Fails to Break $72.00

Feb’25 Brent futures failed to break through support at $72.00/bbl throughout this afternoon and rose to $73.00/bbl at 1720 GMT (time of writing). Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov warned that potential G7 sanctions on Russia’s oil industry could destabilise global energy markets and prompt Russian countermeasures. Proposed measures include reducing the price cap on Russian oil from $60 to $40/bbl or banning its transportation and insurance, though no decision has been finalised. According to data from China’s General Administration of Customs, Russia increased oil exports to China by 1.65% year-on-year to 99 million tons from January to November, valued at $57.4 billion (+4.7%). The EIA forecasts U.S. energy consumption rising from 93.69 qBtu in 2023 to 95.15 qBtu in 2025, with liquid fuels averaging 20.29 mb/d in 2024 and 20.53 in 2025 and natural gas at 90.5 and 90.2 billion cubic feet/day, respectively. Russia remains China’s top oil supplier, followed by Saudi Arabia and Malaysia. Presidents Putin and Xi emphasised strengthening energy cooperation during their May meeting. At the time of writing, the front (Feb/Mar’25) and 6-month (Feb/Aug’25) Brent Futures spreads are at $0.39/bbl and $1.89/bbl, respectively.

The Officials: No rest for the wicked

We saw good Brent support at around $72.00/bbl and the line roughly held. The downward momentum was first arrested
at noon bouncing back towards the mid-$72 point, choppy as the indecisive Americans couldn’t pick between up or down,
so in the end they picked both and flat price bounced up and down, with a climb through the window to close at $72.80/bbl.
Before 15:00 GMT, we were threatening to go below $72 again, but there’s plenty of resistance to going lower, so flat price
just keeps vibrating in the same narrow range and clung on to the $72 handle. The only ones making money are the volatility
sellers. Tight trading ranges suggest many European traders have closed out their positions and shut up shop for the
holidays, but the American traders are more active.

The Officials: Shutting up shop?

Totsa’s cleaning up in Dubai! The window was inundated with Totsa bids, and the host of sellers did their best to smack them but they just couldn’t keep up. Reliance, Exxon and Mitsui were all trying their best to clear the trading table of Totsa’s endless bids. Vitol took on the lion’s share of the work trying to keep a lid on things, clobbering as many of Totsa’s bids as it could. But even that wasn’t enough to get through the mountain of Totsa bids and the Frenchman had three left untouched bids by the time the window no closed and Les Amis withdrew them. The French vacuum cleaner didn’t limit itself to just bidding and was also lifting offers left, right and centre. With such aggressive bidding from Totsa and sellers’ hands full, the Dubai physical premium edged up to 97c, the strongest so far in December. A $1 premium is tantalising!

Overnight & Singapore Window: Brent Softens to $72.20/bbl

Feb’25 Brent futures softened from $72.55/bbl at 0600 GMT to $72.20/bbl at 10:30 GMT (time of writing). The Financial Times reported today that Shell secured Nigerian government approval for a $2.4 billion onshore and shallow-water asset sale to Renaissance Group by committing to a $5 billion investment in the Bonga North deepwater project, with over 300mb of recoverable resources and an expected peak production of 110 kb/d. The strong dollar has contributed to record lows for the Rupee, Real, and Won. China’s one-year bond yield fell to 1% for the first time since 2009, and Bitcoin dropped 12.5% to $95k amid a broader asset market sell-off. US PCE price index data is due today. President-elect Donald Trump threatened the EU with tariffs unless it buys more US oil and gas, stating on Truth Social, “Otherwise, it is TARIFFS all the way!!!” The EU Commission has not commented on the claim. At the time of writing, the front (Feb/Mar’25) and 6-month (Feb/Aug’25) Brent Futures spreads are at $0.43/bbl and $1.76/bbl, respectively.

European Window: Brent Slides to $73.66/bbl

Feb’25 Brent futures fell from $73.70/bbl at 13.30 GMT to $72.70/bbl at 17:00 GMT. A US government shutdown is looming as Congress scrambles to pass a stopgap bill, despite opposition from President-elect Donald Trump, according to Fox News. Economic data showed jobless claims dropped to 220,000 (below estimates) from 242,000 the previous week. US GDP saw annualised growth of 3.1% in Q3, and the Philadelphia Fed survey plunged to -16.4, compared to the predicted +3.0. BP and Iraq have agreed on key technical terms for redeveloping Kirkuk’s oil and gas fields, which still contain billions of barrels of recoverable oil. According to BP, a full contract is expected to be finalized by early next year. Oil operators in North Dakota, the third-largest oil-producing state in the US, are still working to restore facilities after October wildfires impacted key production areas. The fires caused a loss of 520kb and a decline in output to 1.178 mb/d from 1.2 mb/d in September. According to Sinopec, China’s oil consumption is projected to peak by 2027 at 800 million metric tons, equivalent to 16 million barrels per day. They say the decline in diesel and gasoline demand is driving the slowdown in the world’s largest oil importer. At the time of writing, the front (Feb/Mar’25) and 6-month (Feb/Aug’25) Brent Futures spreads are at $0.40/bbl and $1.78/bbl, respectively.

The Officials: Not so flat price

Flat price doesn’t look very flat. The graph shows the volatility of the past couple of days: a consistent decline following the bombshell Powell speech last night and a choppy climb today, especially after lunchtime, as the Americans woke up, apparently having taken stock of the Fed fallout. But the Brent price range is very restrictive and the market doesn’t like seeing it go too far either way at the moment, so it quickly toppled back down to under $73. Major events but constrained volatility. These price fluctuations are small but relentless. Today it was still a very narrow range of barely more than a buck, as the market sees little cause for optimism on supply and demand fundamentals, but there’s plenty of buying from China whenever flat price descends towards $70 and lots of technical support around that level.

The Officials: Pow pow pow! All the money’s gone!

Only one man has the power to send everything plummeting at the same time. Mr Power Powell. And only Total has the power to vacuum dry the Dubai market! The Power! Powell’s press conference had almost every asset class tripping and tumbling. Oil didn’t like it either and slid in the latter hours of American trading last night. A small jump in Brent flat price of around 20c on the rate cut announcement was overshadowed by Powell’s hawkish rhetoric and the subsequent slide down to around $73, 60c lower than before the announcement. Though the dollar’s now the highest in 2 years, so that’s surely a key driver in oil’s price slide. Asia was happy to catch its breath, reassess and consolidate, but Europe didn’t like the news when it woke up, so pushed it down even further and it fell all the way to $72.87/bbl by the close of the Asian session.

Overnight & Singapore Window: Brent Falls to $73/bbl Levels

The Feb’25 Brent futures flat price came off to the $73/bbl level overnight before rising to $73.36/bbl by 10:00 GMT (time of writing). Price action is slightly lower following the Fed’s rate cut, as policymakers signalled a more hawkish stance for 2025, which supported the dollar and was hence bearish for oil prices. In the headlines, Glencore has increased its Middle East oil purchases, acquiring Al-Shaheen and Upper Zakum grades, to supply Singapore’s Bukom refinery acquired from Shell earlier this year. The refinery includes a 237kb/d crude distillation unit. Ukraine launched 13 missiles and 84 drones targeting Russia’s Rostov region, sparking a fire at the Novoshakhtinsk refinery, which was extinguished, amid ongoing strikes on Russian oil infrastructure critical to its war economy. Sinopec forecasts China’s petroleum consumption will peak by 2027 at no more than 800 million tons annually, driven by declining diesel and gasoline demand due to LNG and EV adoption, while the petrochemical sector increasingly dominates oil usage and natural gas consumption peaks higher and earlier than previously estimated. Finally, the front (Feb/Mar) and 6-month (Feb/Aug) Brent futures spreads are at $0.40/bbl and $1.77/bbl respectively.

LPG Report: NG-Elf

The LPG market was relatively uneventful in December, with more of the same in many markets. Going into the festive period, there is a sense of normality in the markets compared to the supply tightness concerns from Panama Canal logistical issues last year, and the ensuing volatility spikes that followed. However, key themes have emerged, namely the weakness in Asian propane (C3 FEI), where milder weather and ongoing weak petrochemical demand have limited its upside. Combining this with the confirmation of OPEC+ cuts, this has further pressured the FEI/CP, with the Jan’25 differential falling below -$20/mt. Meanwhile, the East/West (C3 FEI vs C3 NWE) has fallen into a deeper contango, with the Q1/Q2’25 at a historical low.

European Window: Brent Slides to $73.66/bbl

The Feb Brent Futures contract has seen mixed price action this afternoon, trading up to a high of $74.12 at 16:10 GMT before retracing to $73.61/bbl where it sits at the time of writing, as EIA data highlighted that crude inventories fell by 934kb to 421mb in the week, compared with analysts’ expectations in a Reuters poll for a 1.6mb draw. In headlines, Saudi Arabia’s crude oil exports rose to a three-month high in October, reaching 5.92 mb/d, up 174 kb/d from September, according to JODI data. Despite the increase in exports, crude production slightly declined to 8.972 mb/d as the Kingdom adhered to its pledge to produce “around 9 mb/d.” Meanwhile, Barclays downgraded the energy services sector from positive to neutral, citing a bearish oil macro environment, limited investor capital influx, and potential risks to 2025 earnings. The sector, after three years of double-digit growth, is now experiencing a mid-cycle spending plateau. At the time of writing, the front (Feb/Mar’25) and 6 month (Feb/Aug’25) Brent Futures spreads are at $0.38/bbl and $1.64/bbl, respectively.