Crude prices have given back the brief gains overnight (following API's report of a big crude draw) as US GDP slowed and weighed on demand expectations (offsetting nervousness from another attack on a ship in the Red Sea, and Israeli comments that it probably wouldn’t be able to defeat Hamas before the end of this year).
Additionally, traders are anxiously awaiting the OPEC+ meeting over the weekend for more clarity on the supply-demand outlook.
The official inventory data will trigger the next leg if it confirms API's print.
API
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Crude -6.49mm (-1.9mm exp)
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Cushing -1.71mm
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Gasoline -452k
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Distillates +2.05mm
DOE
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Crude -4.16mm (-1.9mm exp)
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Cushing -1.76mm
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Gasoline +2.02mm
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Distillates +2.54mm
Crude inventories and stocks at the Cushing Hub tumbled last week, confirming API's overnight report. Inventories built though on the product side…
Source: Bloomberg
The Biden admin added 485k barrels to the SPR (while drawing down from the gasoline reserve)…
Source: Bloomberg
US Crude production remained flat near record highs…
Source: Bloomberg
WTI was hovering around $79 ahead of the official data having fallen this morning after the GDP print. WTI extended losses after the official print…
Finally, Bloomberg notes that the prompt timespread for Brent crude is getting closer again to a bearish contango structure that indicates supply is abundant when compared with demand.