Energy: Middle distillate market under pressure
Despite the IMF slightly lowering its global growth forecasts for the year and signalling that risks are skewed to the downside, the oil market still managed to close higher yesterday. ICE Brent settled 1.7% higher on the day. A weaker USD provided some support not just to oil but to the broader commodities complex. For today though attention will be on US CPI, where the market is expecting to see a further slowing. The year-on-year and month-on-month CPI are expected to come in at 5.1% and 0.2%, respectively. Clearly, any surprises to the upside could prove negative for risk assets with the market likely having to readjust its expectations on how much more tightening we will see from the Federal Reserve.
The EIA released its latest Short Term Energy Outlook, where US crude oil production estimates were slightly increased. The EIA revised its 2023 US supply growth number from 560Mbbls/d last month to 660Mbbls/d this month, which would leave output averaging 12.54MMbbls/d. The EIA also expects slightly stronger growth over 2024 with supply set to grow by 210Mbbls/d, which would see output averaging 12.75MMbbls/d.
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Overnight, the API released US inventory data. US crude oil inventories are reported to have increased by a marginal 400Mbbls, although the market was expecting a draw of closer to 1MMbbls. However, crude inventories held at Cushing are reported to have fallen by 1.4MMbbls. Stocks at Cushing have been declining for several weeks now, which has provided some support to the prompt WTI timespread with it having shifted from contango into a small backwardation.
Meanwhile, we are seeing a further easing in strike action in France, which has plagued the French energy industry for the last month. TotalEnergies has said that it is restarting its 247Mbbls/d Normandy refinery, whilst the restart of the 219Mbbls/d Donges refinery is already in progress. This is after workers voted to end strike action and follows ExxonMobil workers also voting to end strike action last week. The increase in French refinery runs and broader concerns over global growth have weighed heavily on gasoil cracks with the prompt crack trading below US$20/bbl for the first time since February last year. In addition, nearby ICE gasoil timespreads have collapsed.
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