Hedge funds and other money managers purchased the equivalent of
16 million barrels in the six most important petroleum-related
futures and options contracts in the week to Feb. 1, exchange
and regulatory data shows.
Portfolio investors have been buyers in six of the most recent
seven weeks, and last week’s purchases reversed a roughly
similar volume of profit-taking the previous week.
The most recent buying was concentrated on the fuels side, with
purchases in European gas oil (+14 million barrels), U.S. diesel
(+2 million) and U.S. gasoline (+5).
On the crude side, however, purchases of NYMEX and ICE WTI (+7
million barrels) were more than offset by sales of Brent (-13
million).
Fund managers have amassed a net position in the three fuels
contracts totalling 225 million barrels (88th percentile for all
weeks since 2013), up from 136 million barrels (59th percentile)
on Dec. 14.
While U.S. gasoline inventories are in line with the
pre-pandemic five-year seasonal average, distillate stocks are
26 million barrels (17%) below the average for 2015-2019.
Rebuilding distillate stocks to more comfortable levels implies
faster than normal crude processing rates at refineries and
downstream equipment configured to maximise the yield of middle
distillates at the expense of light ones.
Reversing the distillate shortage will therefore boost crude
consumption, restrict the available supply of gasoline over the
next few months and lift prices across the entire complex.
Fund managers hold a long-short ratio in middle distillates of
almost 6:1 (83rd percentile) but more than 14:1 in gasoline
(92nd percentile), illustrating how the distillate shortfall
threatens to spill over into other fuels.
Related columns:
- Depleted U.S. distillate stocks show supply chain pressure
(Reuters, Feb. 4)
- Oil investors realise some profits as market looks stretched
(Reuters, Jan. 31)
- Oil market shows signs of overheating (Reuters, Jan. 28)
- Shrunken U.S. oil inventories point to chronic under-supply
(Reuters, Jan. 21)
John Kemp is a Reuters market analyst. The views expressed are
his own
(Editing by David Goodman)
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