Refined Product Futures Drift Lower As Markets Consider IEA And OPEC Reports

Market TalkFriday, Apr 14 2023
Pivotal Week For Price Action

Energy prices are limping into the weekend with crude and refined products both bouncing back and forth across the break-even line overnight after seeing some modest selling in Thursday’s session.

Conflicting views on what’s to come from OPEC and the IEA the past two days are adding to the choppiness in the market that sees diesel prices stuck in a tight sideways range, while gasoline prices have stalled out after touching fresh 6-month highs earlier in the week.

OPEC held its outlook for global demand and supply growth in its monthly oil market report, estimating consumption will increase by 2.5 million barrels/day this year while supply will increase by 1.9 million. The report did cite a contraction in refined product balances in the Atlantic basin, thanks in part to the French refinery strikes, and expects demand for distillates to continue increasing as we move through the 2nd quarter. The cartel’s oil output dropped by 86,000 barrels/day last month, with declines in Angola, Iraq and Nigeria offsetting an increase in Saudi production.

The IEA’s monthly oil market report released this morning had a much more bullish tone, suggesting that world oil demand will increase by 2 million barrels/day, while supply will decline due to OPEC’s announced cuts.  The IEA expects global refinery runs to ramp up substantially the rest of 2023 but will still remain below pre-COVID levels. The EIA’s note ends with a bit of a dire warning: Our oil market balances were already set to tighten in the second half of 2023, with the potential for a substantial supply deficit to emerge. The latest cuts risk exacerbating those strains, pushing both crude and product prices higher. Consumers currently under siege from inflation will suffer even more from higher prices, especially in emerging and developing economies.

How quickly things have changed:  A Reuters note this morning suggests that Asian refiners will be reducing diesel output due to a sudden glut after nearly a year of shortages as the warm winter took away much of the demand that had many fearing severe price spikes this year.  Russia’s push to send products east that used to go West is also factoring into this big change in the Pacific basin and is starting to impact US refiners that are seeing less buying from countries like Brazil.

The first official forecasts for the 2023 hurricane season came in yesterday, fittingly on the same day that several south Florida fuel terminals were forced to close due to flash flooding.   The good news is that the experts predict a below-average hurricane season this year, the bad news is that it still just takes 1 to make a mess out of the supply network.

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Market Talk Update 04.14.2023

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Market TalkFriday, Dec 8 2023

Wholesale Gasoline Prices Across Most Of The US Reached Their Lowest Levels In 2-Years Thursday

Wholesale gasoline prices across most of the US reached their lowest levels in 2-years Thursday, after the morning recovery rally fizzled in the afternoon. RBOB gasoline futures dipped below the $2 mark briefly, before settling just above it, while cash prices in several major markets dropped below $1.80 for the first time since December 2021, while crude oil and diesel prices reached fresh 6-month lows. 

The bulls are giving it another go this morning, pushing futures up 5-cents for gasoline and 6- cents for diesel, trying to snap the streak of 6-straight daily losses for ULSD, although we’ll need to see products double their early gains to erase the weekly decline.

Energy prices didn’t react much initially to the November Payroll report that estimated 199,000 jobs were added during the month, while the official unemployment rate dipped to 3.7% from 3.9% and the U-6 rate dropped to 7% from 7.2%. Equity futures moved modestly lower immediately following that report as labor market resilience throws cold water on recent hopes for interest rate cuts, but as has often been the case for several months now, energy prices are managing to shrug off the move in stocks. 

Big negative basis values continue to be the theme across the Gulf Coast and Mid-Continent, with USGC, Group 3 and Chicago all trading at 20+ cent discounts to futures for both gasoline and diesel. Those negative values are weighing on refining margins with USGC crack spreads approaching their lowest levels in 2 years, which will almost certainly curtail some refinery run rates through the winter months. East Coast refiners meanwhile are finding themselves in a strong position as shipping bottlenecks keep PADD 1 inventories low and their crack spreads remain in the mid $20/barrel range despite the recent pull back in futures.     

The long-awaited Dangote refinery is reportedly receiving its first cargo of crude oil today.  That new 650mb/day refinery would be the world’s largest single train refinery, but is already years behind schedule, and many still doubt its ability to run anywhere near capacity. We’ve already seen the impact Kuwait’s 615mb/day Al Zour refinery can have on markets across the Atlantic basin, so whether or not the Nigerian facility can ramp up run rates could have a major influence on product prices next year.

Click here to download a PDF of today's TACenergy Market Talk.

Pivotal Week For Price Action
Market TalkThursday, Dec 7 2023

West Coast Gasoline Inventories Dropped Sharply Last Week And Are Now Holding Below Their 5-year Seasonal Range

Energy futures are bouncing this morning as buyers are finally stepping in after RBOB futures touched a 2-year low Wednesday, while WTI and ULSD both hit their lowest levels in 5 months. There are headwinds both fundamentally and technically, but so far, the market isn’t acting like a collapse is imminent and as the table below shows this is right about the time when gasoline prices bottomed out the past two years.

Saudi Arabia and Russia released a joint statement this morning, following Vladimir Putin’s trip to the Kingdom, urging OPEC & friends to join their output cut agreement, which takes the risk of a price war that could send prices plunging (as we’ve seen twice in the past decade) off the table for now and seems to be contributing to WTI climbing back above the $70 mark and Brent getting back above $75. 

The DOE reported a healthy bounce back in fuel demand estimates after the annual Thanksgiving holiday hangover, but that wasn’t enough to prevent refined product inventories from continuing to build as refiners continue to return from maintenance and increase run rates. The builds in gasoline inventories particularly suggest it could be a tough winter for some refiners who are already having some challenges clearing their extra barrels. 

The exception on gasoline comes in PADD 5. West Coast gasoline inventories dropped sharply last week and are now holding below their 5-year seasonal range, which is dramatically lower than year-ago levels which set the top end of that range. Those tight stocks help explain why West Coast values are the most expensive in the country by a wide margin and leave little cushion to deal with unplanned maintenance which helps explain the jump in CARBOB basis values this week. 

On the diesel side of the barrel, the recent themes of tight supplies on the East Coast, ample supply in the Midwest and Gulf Coast, and a Wild Card on the west coast since we don’t see Renewable Diesel inventories in the weekly figures continues. Take a look at the PADD 2 gasoline and diesel charts below and it’s easy to understand why we’re seeing cash prices in both Group 3 and Chicago approaching multi-year lows with 20-30 cent discounts to futures becoming the rule rather than the exception.  

The market seemed to shrug off the drop in total US crude oil stocks, as Cushing OK stocks increased for a 7th straight week, and the decline was largely driven by the largest negative adjustment value on record, which went from a positive 1.2 million barrels/day last week to negative 1.4 million barrels/day this week. The EIA has done a lot of work trying to fix the bugs in its report system and to better define what exactly it’s reporting, but clearly there’s still more work to be done. 

Click here to download a PDF of today's TACenergy Market Talk, including all charts from the Weekly DOE Report.

Pivotal Week For Price Action