Hedge funds and other money managers increased their combined
net long position in the six major petroleum contracts by
another 50 million barrels in the week to Sept. 25.
Portfolio managers have raised their combined net long position
by a total of 196 million barrels over the last five weeks,
according to exchange and regulatory data.
Bullish long positions now outnumber bearish short ones by a
ratio of more than 12:1, and the imbalance is rapidly closing in
on the record 14:1 back in April.
But the new wave of hedge fund bullishness is concentrated
almost entirely in Brent rather than WTI or refined fuels
(https://tmsnrt.rs/2OvBJTE).
Fund managers have raised their net in Brent by 172 million
barrels since Aug. 21 compared with an increase of just 5
million in WTI.
Fund managers now hold a net long position of almost 500 million
barrels in Brent betting prices will increase even further from
their current four-year high.
Hedge fund long positions outnumber short ones in Brent by more
than 19:1, up from a ratio of just 8:1 at the start of August,
and closing in on the record 21:1 set in April.
Traders foresee a shortage of seaborne crudes linked to Brent as
U.S. sanctions on Iran go into effect on Nov. 4, despite
reassurances from Saudi Arabia, Russia and the United States
supplies will remain adequate.
Concern about feedstock shortages linked to sanctions explains
why position-building has been overwhelmingly concentrated in
Brent rather than WTI or refined fuels.
The inland U.S. crude market remains well-supplied and refined
fuel markets appear balanced as an international freight
slowdown and higher prices take their toll on consumption.
But Brent spot prices have climbed by more than $12 per barrel
(17 percent) since mid-August while the six-month calendar
spread has risen almost $2.60 and swung from contango into a
pronounced backwardation.
Saudi Arabia and Russia have both pledged to increase production
to make up for the loss of crude oil exports from Iran. U.S.
officials have been working with refiners in Asia to find
replacements or Iranian oil.
None of that has assuaged fears about shortfalls in crude
availability as sanctions go into effect.
Some analysts question whether Saudi Arabia has enough spare
capacity to replace all the barrels lost as a result of
sanctions while maintaining enough in reserve to meet any
further shortfalls.
Others question whether the kingdom is willing to increase
production enough to act as a cap on prices or bring them back
down below $80, despite political pressure from the United
States.
The enormous concentration of hedge fund long positions in Brent
creates a significant risk of a short-term price reversal if and
when fund managers attempt to realize some of their profits
following the rally.
For the time being, however, with doubts swirling around the
outlook for oil supplies, the message from hedge fund managers
is simple: show me the barrels.
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