Energy – Rebound in Chinese factory activity supports oil
Sentiment in the oil market remains upbeat this morning, following improving macro sentiments as China’s manufacturing sector reported the biggest recovery in more than a decade – both manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMIs for February were very strong. Some sub-indices are the highest in several years. The official manufacturing and non-manufacturing PMI indices came in at 52.6 and 56.3, respectively, in February compared to 50.1 and 54.4 in January. The CAIXIN manufacturing PMI was 51.6 in February up from 49.2 in January. This set of numbers is stronger than market expectations.
Our China economist believes that that the government will set a GDP growth target of 5.5% to 6% at the Two Sessions on 5 March. This set of PMI data gives the government a very good reason to set a high growth target.
Meanwhile, the oil market largely ignored a relatively bearish API release overnight, with prices of both ICE Brent and NYMEX WTI extending gains for a second straight session today.
The API reported that US crude oil inventories increased by 6.2MMbbls over the last week, quite a bit more than the roughly 1.4MMbbls build the market was expecting. In addition, Cushing crude stocks are reported to have increased by 483Mbbls. On the products side, API reported that gasoline inventories fell by 1.8MMbbls, whilst distillates stocks decreased by 341Mbbls. The more widely followed EIA report will be released later today. If confirmed by EIA, this will be the tenth consecutive week of inventory buildup in the US with total crude stocks moving further up compared to the five-year average at this point in the season.
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Media reports suggest that Russia’s crude production has increased by around 2% month-on-month to 11.05MMbbls/d in February, just shy of the highs made in February 2022 at 11.08MMbbls/d. Russia is reported to have increased oil exports to China and India in recent months as demand in Europe continues to fall. Demand for Russian crude continues to remain strong in the Asian market due to higher discounts. Russia was previously reported to be planning a production cut of around 500Mbbls/d from March onwards to reduce the global supply of oil and push prices higher.
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