Equities And Energy Futures Swing After A Weekend Of Bank Failures

March madness is back as a busy weekend for bankers has created whipsaw action in energy and equity futures. We’ve seen consecutive daily price swings greater than 14- cents/gallon for both RBOB and ULSD prices as markets around the world wonder if we’re in the early stages of a new banking crisis but compared to the daily trading ranges of a dollar/gallon or more we saw the 2nd week of March last year, it’s hard to get too excited about these latest swings.
While you were watching The Oscars and/or basketball this weekend, the FED created a new $25 billion Bank Term Funding Program (BTFP) which will offer loans to banks and other financial institutions to “help assure banks have the ability to meet the needs of all their depositors.” A joint statement from the Treasury, FDIC, and FED officials said that all depositors of SVB – not just those insured by the FDIC – would be fully protected, while also highlighting that the agencies had been forced to step in to rescue another institution, Signature Bank of New York.
The announcements of new liquidity facilities were initially met with strong buying in equity futures Sunday evening, and energy contracts were going along for the ride. This morning however the mood has soured as bailout actions reminiscent of the 2008 financial crisis have done little to soothe nerves on edge that more fallout is coming. Those fears are sparking what could either be called a flight to safety as US treasury yields tumble by the most in 15 years, or to stupidity as crypto currencies are also rallying, even though they may be a key contributor into the failed banks in the first place. The next few weeks should be interesting to say the least.
Baker Hughes reported a net decline of 2 more oil rigs, bringing the total active rig count to a 9-month low. The Permian basin led the declines with 6 rigs taken offline on the week.
The CFTC is still working to get caught up on their weekly commitments of traders reports but showed that money managers had continued to bail out of energy contracts in the middle of February. ICE data shows that the large speculators stepped up purchases of Brent and Gasoil contracts last week, which they may now be regretting.
Click here to download a PDF of today's TACenergy Market Talk.
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Refined Products Are Moving Lower For A 2nd Day After Coming Under Heavy Selling Pressure In Wednesday’s Session
Refined products are moving lower for a 2nd day after coming under heavy selling pressure in Wednesday’s session. Rapidly increasing refinery runs and sluggish diesel demand both seemed to weigh heavily on product prices, while crude oil is still benefitting from the disruption of exports from Iraq. Prices remain range-bound, so expect more choppy back and forth action in the weeks ahead.
US oil inventories saw a large decline last week, despite another 13-million barrels of oil being found in the weekly adjustment figure, as imports dropped to a 2-year low, and refinery runs cranked up in most regions as many facilities return from spring maintenance.
The refining utilization percentage jumped to its highest level of the year but remains overstated since the new 250,000 barrels/day of output from Exxon’s Beaumont facility still isn’t being counted in the official capacity figures. If you’re shocked that the government report could have such a glaring omission, then you haven’t been paying attention to the Crude Adjustment figure this year, and the artificially inflated petroleum demand estimates that have come with it.
Speaking of which, we’re now just a couple of months away from WTI Midland crude oil being included in the Dated Brent index, and given the uncertainty in the US over what should be classified as oil vs condensate, expect some confusion once those barrels start being included in the international benchmark as well.
Diesel demand continues to hover near the lowest levels we’ve seen for the first quarter in the past 20+ years, dropping sharply again last week after 2 straight weeks of increases had some markets hoping that the worst was behind us. Now that we’re moving out of the heating season, we’ll soon get more clarity on how on road and industrial demand is holding up on its own in the weekly figures that have been heavily influenced by the winter that wasn’t across large parts of the country.
Speaking of which, the EIA offered another mea culpa of sorts Wednesday by comparing its October Winter Fuels outlook to the current reality, which shows a huge reduction in heating demand vs expectations just 6-months ago.
It’s not just domestic consumption of diesel that’s under pressure, exports have fallen below their 5-year average as buyers in South America are buying more Russian barrels, and European nations are getting more from new facilities in the Middle East.
Take a look at the spike in PADD 5 gasoline imports last week to get a feel for how the region may soon be forced to adjust to rapidly increasing refining capacity in Asia, while domestic facilities come under pressure.

Crude Oil Prices Are Trying To Lead Another Rally In Energy Futures This Morning
Crude oil prices are trying to lead another rally in energy futures this morning, while ULSD prices are resisting the pull higher. Stocks are pointed higher in the early going as no news is seen as good news in the banking crisis.
WTI prices have rallied by $10/barrel in the past 7 trading days, even with a $5 pullback last Thursday and Friday. The recovery puts WTI back in the top half of its March trading range but there’s still another $7 to go before the highs of the month are threatened.
Yesterday’s API report seems to be aiding the continued strength in crude, with a 6 million barrel inventory decline estimated by the industry group last week. That report also showed a decline of 5.9 million barrels of gasoline which is consistent with the spring pattern of drawdowns as we move through the RVP transition, while distillates saw a build of 550k barrels. The DOE’s weekly report is due out at its normal time this morning.
Diesel prices seems to be reacting both to the small build in inventories – which is yet another data point of the weak demand so far this year for distillates – and on the back of crumbling natural gas prices that settled at their lowest levels in 2.5 years yesterday and fell below $2/million BTU this morning.
While diesel futures are soft, rack markets across the Southwestern US remain unusually tight, with spreads vs spot markets approaching $1/gallon in several cases as local refiners go through maintenance and pipeline capacity for resupply remains limited. The tightest supply in the region however remains the Phoenix CBG boutique gasoline grade which is going for $1.20/gallon over spots as several of the few refineries that can make that product are having to perform maintenance at the same time.
French refinery strikes continue for a 4th week and are estimated to be keeping close to 1 million barrels/day of fuel production offline, which is roughly 90% of French capacity and almost 1% of total global capacity. That disruption is having numerous ripple effects on crude oil markets in the Atlantic basin, while the impact on refined product supplies and prices remains much more contained than it was when this happened just 5 months ago.
Click here to download a PDF of today's TACenergy Market Talk.
