COT Report: Cherrypicking Risk
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.
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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.
This report reviews the key data from the US EIA’s Weekly Petroleum Status Report
Onyx’s in-house CTA positioning model determines the net positioning of CTAs in a range of futures benchmarks. The week ending 06 Jan saw an increase in net positioning with a rise in bullish sentiment. Net positioning for the total collection of futures climbed from -59k on 9 Dec, flipping positive to 5k by 06 Jan. We have seen that total net positioning has been increasing steadily since the start of December, recorded at -106k on 03 Dec. This week, we saw significant strength across the futures contracts, with WTI seeing a particularly high increase w/w from -10k to 5.6k while Brent followed close behind, increasing from -12k to 1.6k. RBOB futures remained the lowest on the positioning model, moving up from -24k on 31 Dec to -12k by 06 Jan.
On Monday, the front-month March 2025 Brent contract moved higher to trade just under $77.50/bbl at the time of writing. Some of the recent buoyancy in crude prices stemmed from the strength in physical Middle Eastern and Asian markets, with
This report covers the correlation in daily returns (on different rolling window periods) between the main energy contracts listed on the ICE and NYMEX exchange and the S&P 500 and the DXY dollar index.
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.
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
This report compares and contrasts the Bloomberg survey of ICE Brent and NYMEX WTI forecast to their high/low range as well the forward curve
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.
This report reviews the key data from the US EIA’s Weekly Petroleum Status Report
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.
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,
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.
This report covers the correlation in daily returns (on different rolling window periods) between the main energy contracts listed on the ICE and NYMEX exchange and the S&P 500 and the DXY dollar index.
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.
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
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.
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
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
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.
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.
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,
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.
This report covers the correlation in daily returns (on different rolling window periods) between the main energy contracts listed on the ICE and NYMEX exchange and the S&P 500 and the DXY dollar index.
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
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.
This report reviews the key data from the US EIA’s Weekly Petroleum Status Report
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
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.
This report covers the correlation in daily returns (on different rolling window periods) between the main energy contracts listed on the ICE and NYMEX exchange and the S&P 500 and the DXY dollar index.
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
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.
This report reviews the key data from the US EIA’s Weekly Petroleum Status Report
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’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.
Saudi allocations to Asia are out! No major surprises other than volumes declining but only moderately. Crude allocations to Chinese refiners fell to 43.5 mil bbls for February delivery, down from 46 mil bbls in January. That’s still far above the 36.5 mil bbls they assigned to China for December, as the Saudis fight for market share. Rongsheng retained top spot, being assigned 16 mil bbls, while Unipec got a 2.5 mil bbls bump from January to reach 10.5 mil bbls. The month’s losers were Shandong and CNOOC, which both didn’t get a drop, having received 2 mil bbls in the prior allocation. CNOOC’s had a rough couple of days, what with the US designating it a company that supports the Chinese military and slapping sanctions all over its shipping.
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. Please note that the release of this week’s CFTC COT report has been delayed to Monday, 13 January.
Mar’25 Brent futures dropped overnight to a low of around $75.70/bbl at 0140 GMT before it was slightly more supported to $76.10/bbl at 1020 GMT (time of writing). Shell has deemed its oil discovery off Namibia’s coast commercially unviable, leading to a projected $400m (£325.52m) write-down, Reuters reports. This setback hinders Namibia’s hopes of becoming an oil producer, with Shell stating that resources in offshore block PEL39 “cannot currently be confirmed for commercial development.” Alaska is suing the Biden administration, claiming it violated a Trump-era law by limiting oil and gas drilling in the Arctic National Wildlife Refuge. The 2017 law required two lease sales by December 2024, but Alaska argues the administration’s recent 400,000-acre lease, announced with restrictions, fails to meet the mandate. Oil companies declined to bid in a US government auction for Arctic National Wildlife Refuge drilling rights, reflecting waning industry interest in the crude-rich but challenging region. The Interior Department reported no bids ahead of Friday’s unsealing, marking the second failed auction in 4 years. A 2021 sale under Trump drew just 11 bids, mostly from an Alaska development corporation. In Canada, Alberta’s oil production reached a record 4.197 mb/d in November, surpassing the previous high of 4.187 mb/d set in December 2023, according to the Alberta Energy Regulator. The front (Mar/Apr) and 6-month (Mar/Sep) Brent futures spreads are at $0.61/bbl and $2.56/bbl respectively.
Certain traders make a lot of dosh from the UK power market but it’s all Paddington can do to hold onto his hat and try to hang onto his rapidly evaporating winter energy budget . We’re certainly feeling the pinch of the current cold snap seeing demand surge, coinciding with a lull in the wind slashing production from windfarms. And just yesterday Mr Milliband was gloating about wind power overtaking gas as the biggest source of electricity… “British comedic timing”, as one trader put it.
After reaching nearly $77.90/bbl this morning, the Mar’25 Brent futures contract has weakened this afternoon, selling-off from $77.50/bbl around 1300 GMT down to $76.25/bbl at 1730 GMT (time of writing). Crude oil prices saw bearish sentiment alongside the release of EIA data at 1550 GMT today, which showed a lower-than-expected draw of 959kb in US crude oil inventories for the week ending 03 Jan, compared to a forecasted draw of 2mb. In the news today, the Ukrainian military said it set fire to a Russian oil depot which provided fuel to the Engels-2 military air base containing Russian nuclear bomber planes, as per Reuters. Meanwhile, a Russian regional governor Roman Busargin stated that a fire caused by a “mass drone attack” had broken out in Engels at an industrial site, which he did not name. In other news, India’s state-owned Oil and Natural Gas Corporation (ONGC) has hired BP to be the technical services provider at their Mumbai High oilfield, a move aimed at identifying improvements in the facilities to boost crude production. The oilfield hit a peak oil production of 471kb/d in March 1985, with output declining to around 134kb/d as of last year. Finally, strong European demand for Guyana’s crude has pushed the country’s oil exports up by 54% to 582kb/d in 2024, according to Reuters citing LSEG shipping data. Since Guyana began exporting oil in early 2020, it is now the fifth largest Latin American crude exporter after Brazil, Mexico, Venezuela, and Colombia. Finally, at the time of writing, the Mar/Apr’25 and Mar/Sep’25 Brent futures spreads stand at $0.62/bbl and $2.63/bbl, respectively.
Chinese demand ahead of the New Year remains fairly strong and has been driving flat price and structure. There was only one way for Asian trading to take Brent, Dubai and anything else: up! The Asian session opened and had us firmly back in the $77 range, before it closed at $77.60/bbl. A violent spike immediately after the window saw it jump to peak at $77.88. The $78 handle is dangling, tempting flat price up, but Brent is yet to establish a beachhead on those lofty slopes. $80 could be in the cards before everybody disappears during the upcoming celebrations for the year 4723. In the Dubai market, Totsa almost seemed overwhelmed by the number of offers, scrambling to lift them all before it lost out. Exxon, PetroChina and Reliance were all raining down offers onto the trading table, while Unipec threw a few down too, as well as hitting the few bids that buyers had chance to enter. Mercuria was one of the few buyers that managed to land a couple of bids – that were set upon by a voracious Unipec. Totsa got a whacking from the Chinese state company too. Totsa was obviously the heavy lifter, bulging like a Bulgarian weightlifter under an immense load he’s holding above his head. But is it in triumph? Well, Totsa did enough for the Dubai physical premium to firm up a touch and reach $1.60!
The Mar’25 Brent futures flat price strengthened overnight from the $77/bbl level, reaching a high of $77.88/bbl at 08:38 GMT and is set to test the $78/bbl resistance level. Alongside expectations of further sanctions on Russia and hopes for a revival of Chinese demand, sentiment was boosted by a larger-than-expected draw in API crude inventories of 4.02mb. In the news, CNOOC said on Wednesday it was aware of its inclusion on a U.S. Defense Department list of companies linked to the Chinese military and would continue to follow up the move. Exxon expects a $700 million profit hit from lower oil prices and shrinking refining margins in Q4’24, signaling challenges for Big Oil amid global crude oversupply and Chinese economic concerns. Sinopec’s Zhenhai refinery reported a fire at its new 220kb/d CDU during commissioning, which was extinguished with no injuries. Iran is pressuring China to release $1.7 billion worth of oil stranded in Chinese ports since 2018 due to U.S. sanctions, as it faces mounting storage fees and urgency to sell the oil before former President Trump returns to power and potentially tightens sanctions further. Finally, the front (Mar/Apr) and 6-month (Mar/Sep) Brent futures spreads are at $0.70/bbl and $2.96/bbl respectively.
The bears had their turn over the festive period, and the Dated Brent bulls have entered 2025 fully locked in. Physical differentials climbed above $0/bbl on 06 Jan, and the direction and momentum of the physical will dictate the market sentiment in the coming weeks. The theme over the Christmas period was bearish, where the physical differential was pressured below $0/bbl. We saw two trade houses and a major offer the prompt weeks, which saw the 23-27 Dec, 30-03 Jan, and 6-10 Jan crater. In addition, a significant buyer had disappeared from the bid side, which was significant. However, the new year has brought in new themes.
The North Sea window was a chaotic affair. Forties, Brent and Midland were hurled across the floor. There were plenty of bids for FOB Forties – from Mercuria, Mitsui and a rare appearance from Petraco. But the Forties offers were for CIF cargoes only. Gunvor’s 19-23 Jan CIF Forties got picked up by Trafi at Dated +$1.35. Having both offered and lifted Forties yesterday, BP returned to offer Forties again today, but didn’t get any interest.
However, the British major also offered Brent for 22-24 Jan and lowered its offer to Dated +$0.20, sparking buying interest from Mercuria who bought the cargo at this level. Gunvor entered the window offering Midland and didn’t budge from its original offer of $1.60 over Dated for a 20-24 Midland. Eventually, PetroIneos scooped this up at the offered price. A messy one but that’s when it’s most fun 😊
The Mar’25 Brent futures contract strengthened above $77/bbl at noon GMT today, where it met resistance and softened to $76.70/bbl at 14:15 GMT. Since then, the benchmark crude futures contract has continued to oscillate between these ranges, seeing resistance at $77.15/bbl and support at $76.65/bbl, and stands at $76.95/bbl at 17:30 GMT (time of writing).
The Feb’25 RBOB futures contract saw support at the end of 2024 but began the new year softening from $2.07/gal on 03 Jan to $2.03/gal on 07 Jan (at the time of writing).
Another week brings another selection of new trade ideas from Onyx Research, this time looking at trades in crude oil and gasoline 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.
The window saw 2025’s first convergence, on the fourth trading day of the year. No prizes for guessing who picked it up. Of course it was Totsa. And naturally it was Exxon providing. Exxon declared an Upper Zakum cargo to the thirsty French aspirateur. Totsa was happy to lift bids from any of a number of sellers. Unipec’s offers, those from Trafi or Reliance, they all got a bashing. Vitol got a smack too, as did Shell. But the number of sellers was overwhelming, as Totsa’s mighty effort failed to halt the slip in both the Dubai physical flat price and Dubai physical premium from yesterday. The buyside players were few in number, but Totsa’s aggression made up for its solitude. Only Mercuria and BP were also there, and their bids went largely unnoticed in the sea of Totsa lifting and sellers working at full speed to keep a handle on the rampaging Taureau. Despite another impressive showing from Totsa, the Dubai physical premium slipped to $1.56, 5c down on the day. Is the indefatigable monster finally flagging? Can it make it to Chinese New Year in February, when we’ll get a couple of days with no Singapore window?
The Mar’25 Brent futures contract initially declined this morning from around $76.30/bbl at 0615 GMT down to almost $75.90/bbl at 0900 GMT, before recovering to $76.60/bbl at 1030 GMT (time of writing). In the news today, South Sudan’s government has directed the Dar Petroleum Operating Co. (DPOC) to begin resuming oil output on 8 January, in a letter seen by Bloomberg. DPOC operates in Block 3 and 7, with a government target for crude production projected to reach 90kb/d in the first six months. In other news, India’s refining capacity is set to expand 20% by 2028 amid growing domestic and overseas demand for oil products, the country’s petroleum minister Hardeep Singh Puri stated. S&P Global Commodity Insights estimates India’s refining capacity could reach 300 million metric tonnes by 2028, with 58% of this increase coming from brownfield expansions. Finally, Nigeria’s Seplat intends to raise its production output from around 50,000 barrels per day to 120,000 barrels per day within six months, after recently acquiring Exxon Mobil’s assets in the West African country, as per Financial Times. At the time of writing, the Mar/Apr’25 and Mar/Sep’25 Brent futures spreads stand at $0.62/bbl and $2.62/bbl, respectively.
After seeing strength this morning, the Mar’25 Brent futures continued to rise from $76.80/bbl at 1200 GMT up to $77.50/bbl at 1515 GMT, before declining to $76.30/bbl at 1740 GMT (time of writing). In the news today, the Biden administration has banned oil drilling in large coastal areas ahead of President-elect Trump’s inauguration. President Biden is issuing two Presidential Memoranda to protect more than 625 million acres off the East and West coasts, including the eastern Gulf of Mexico and parts of the Bering Sea in Alaska, indefinitely prohibiting these areas from federal offshore oil and gas leasing. In other news, Sudan has lifted a nearly year-long force majeure on pipelines transporting South Sudan’s oil through Sudan to the Red Sea, Reuters reported citing a letter from Sudan’s Energy Ministry. South Sudan’s crude exports reached an annual peak of 186kb/d in January 2024, falling to 58kb/d by December 2024, according to tanker tracking data compiled by Bloomberg. Finally, India’s SPR is looking to expand its inventories, having issued a notice to private firms inviting them to bid for a storage site of 2.5 million metric tonnes at Padur, according to Reuters. India’s underground SPR storage has a total approximate capacity of 5.33 million metric tonnes of crude oil, as per India’s Ministry of Petroleum and Natural Gas. At the time of writing, the Mar/Apr ’25 and Mar/Sep ’25 Brent futures spreads stand at $0.62/bbl and $2.61/bbl, respectively.
Brent made a run for it! It broke through $77 briefly before 13:00 GMT and reinforced its position above the mark in mid-afternoon trading. A decline into the window saw it drop back into the $76 range, and it closed the European session at $76.63/bbl. Traders reported “quite a few buyers on Dated”, with limited sellside interest and that turned out to be the case in the physical window. One enthusiastic player on the sellside was Gunvor, who came out all guns blazing early in the window, offering Forties and Midland. BP joined in on the action too, offering a Forties of its own – this one was for 21-25 Jan. PetroIneos liked the look of that and lifted BP’s offer at Dated +$1.20 – pretty strong! China is back in the North Sea after a hiatus.
In the week ending 24 December, money managers were risk-off in Brent while adding length to their long positions in WTI. With crude oil markets quietening down for the holiday season, we saw proportionately lower positional changes in the latter half of December, alongside ongoing uncertainty surrounding Trump’s incoming administration policies and China’s oil demand outlook heading into 2025. RBOB futures saw a reduction in money manager long positions for the week to 24 December, while gasoil and heating oil futures showed a clear buy-side skew among speculative players.
Mar’25 Brent futures strengthened, rising from $73.40/bbl on 30 Dec to $76.90/bbl on 6 Jan, with higher highs and lows. The RSI entered overbought territory on Jan 3, while Bollinger bands widened due to increased volatility. The MACD indicated bullish momentum, but price gains may reflect opportunistic profit-taking in low liquidity.
The Saudis are a merciful bunch and didn’t want to tighten the noose too much on their customers – treat them nicely and they’ll keep coming back! The Saudis recognised the high prices in Dubai and the widening premium were a function of Totsa lifting Dubai again and again in the pricing window and did not fully reflect the price upside. Rumours circulated in Asia that Totsa made $20-30 million gains from its foray where it had a 30+ million bbl swaps position with low entry levels. The Arab Light OSP for Asia (the Saudis’ biggest buyers) was raised by 60c to reach $1.50 over the average of Dubai + Oman grades. That’s not too stringent, given the Dubai physical premium’s extraordinary strength late in December, with the penultimate premium of +$2.25 and final value of +$1.95. With the combination of bigger Chinese import quotas and a relatively low Brent flat price nearing $70 in December, and the ensuing buying rush (cough cough Totsa…), Aramco evidently chose not to reflect the bubbling up premia towards the end of the month and buyers must be happy with that!
The Mar’25 Brent futures contract fell from a daily high of $76.90/bbl at 0100 GMT to see resistance at $76.15/bbl, around level with the 21-day simple moving average, for much of the morning. It rose to $76.40/bbl at 1020 GMT (time of writing), with the daily upper Bollinger Band seemingly acting as a resistance level. Saudi Arabia plans to borrow $37 billion in 2025 to fund oil-diversification projects and repay debt, starting with a three-tranche dollar bond managed by Citigroup, Goldman Sachs, and JPMorgan. Saudi Aramco raised its February crude prices for Asia, increasing Arab Light by 60 cents to $1.50 per barrel above the regional benchmark, after hitting a four-year low in January. Asia’s crude oil imports fell 1.4% in 2024, the first annual decline since the pandemic, driven by a 1.9% drop in Chinese imports, Reuters reported. Meanwhile, India is expected to surpass China as the top driver of global oil demand in 2025, with a forecasted 3.2% growth compared to China’s 1.7%, according to S&P Global. Beijing will expand ultra-long treasury note funding in 2025 to boost company growth and consumer spending, aiming to revive the slowing economy. At the time of writing, the Mar/Apr’25 and Mar/Sep’25 Brent futures spreads stand at $0.60/bbl and $2.61/bbl, respectively.
After seeing weakness this morning, the Mar’25 Brent futures contract recovered this afternoon, increasing from $75.60/bbl at around 1100 GMT up to $76.60/bbl at 1730 GMT (time of writing). In the news today, Venezuela’s oil exports rose 10.5% y/y in 2024 to an average 772kb/d, with exports to the US soaring 64% to 222kb/d last year, according to data compiled by Reuters. A large share of the year’s export gains came from Chevron’s shipments of Venezuelan crude to the US under a license in place since early 2023. In addition, Venezuela’s crude exports to China were down 18% y/y to 351kb/d, while exports to India jumped to 63kb/d this year from just over 10kb/d in 2023. In other news, China’s CNPC is expected to boost crude production capacity at its West Qurna 1 oilfield in Iraq from the current 550kb/d capacity to 800kb/d by 2028 and 1.2mb/d by 2035, the project’s subsurface manager Cai Kaiping stated. Finally, Middle Eastern crude oil grades strengthened in the final week of December on robust demand from Asian refiners and limited flows of Iranian and Russian barrels, as per Bloomberg. In late-December, Oman crude futures and partial lots of Dubai crude were priced at $1 or more over Brent, surging to a rare premium to the North Sea crude. At the time of writing, the Mar/Apr ’25 and Mar/Sep ’25 Brent futures spreads stand at $0.62/bbl and $2.70/bbl, respectively.
Europe slipped back below $76 in its morning trading, shedding some of the gains it made yesterday. By lunchtime, we were looking at the mid-$75 range. Then, the Americans gave Brent a leg-up and put us back onto a $76 handle before 13:45 GMT, recovering the slide to finish at $76.33/bbl. Over in the window, Gunvor was back for another round of North Sea fun, offering a Forties CIF cargo for 15-19 Jan. Its best offer was Dated +$1 but that didn’t get any attention, so withdrew. Its other Forties offer, 19-23 Jan, came to Dated +$1.40 but likewise didn’t get a nibble. BP also offered Forties CIF 18-22 Jan and withdrew it at $1.50 over Dated. The sellers have been left out in the cold for the time being.
The late session yesterday saw Brent flat price decline below $76 again, and the Asian session flirted with that level throughout, but just failed to cling on to it, eventually closing at $75.98/bbl. Having marginally come up short of the $76 handle at the close, flat price slipped deeper into $75 following the window and settled in the mid-$75 range. On a flat price basis, physical Dubai loadings in March were significantly lower yesterday than the February loading physical Dubai as it traded in the final calendar December sessions. Yesterday, Dubai partials/Brent futures were 43c, but today gained 12c to leave Dubai partials/Brent futures at 55c. Asian demand is fierce! Buy before the yuan depreciates even further. China’s demand looks like it’s mounting a recovery – the stimulus seems to be working.
The Mar’25 Brent futures contract has steadily declined this morning from around $76.00/bbl at 0600 GMT down to $75.65/bbl at 1050 GMT (time of writing). In the news today, US President-elect Trump has called to “open up” the North Sea and get rid of windmills in a post on his social media platform Truth Social. Trump’s comments came in response to a report about Apache Corporation’s plan to exit the North Sea by year-end 2029, as per Reuters. Oil companies have been exiting the North Sea in recent decades, with production declining from a peak of 4.4mb/d of oil equivalent at the start of the millennium to around 1.3mb/d today, Reuters stated. In other news, the decline in Mexico’s crude and gas production could accelerate, potentially losing 100kb/d of production every year beginning in 2025, according to S&P Global. The report highlighted that production is falling at Pemex’s seven largest fields, with multiple major oil companies relinquishing exploration contracts in recent years, including Shell and Chevron. Finally, heating oil futures have gained 5% w/w while US natural gas prices saw a weekly rise of 4%, according to the Financial Times. The jump in prices comes as the National Weather Service warns of an “Arctic outbreak”, with the potential for sub-zero temperatures as far south as the Gulf Coast and Florida. At the time of writing, the Mar/Apr’25 and Mar/Sep’25 Brent futures spreads stand at $0.49/bbl and $2.36/bbl, respectively.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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…
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 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.
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.
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.