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Escalating Russia-Ukraine Tensions Amplify Oil Supply Risks: The Commodities Feed

Escalating Russia-Ukraine Tensions Amplify Oil Supply Risks: The Commodities Feed
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  1. The Commodities Feed: Russia-Ukraine tensions add to oil supply risks
    1. Energy – Ukrainian drone attacks on Russian oil tankers

      The Commodities Feed: Russia-Ukraine tensions add to oil supply risks

      The Ukrainian drone attacks on Russian oil tankers in the Black Sea region have added to supply risks for the crude oil market. Meanwhile, the Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee (JMMC) meeting of OPEC+ countries ended without any recommendation to change oil output levels for now.

       

      Energy – Ukrainian drone attacks on Russian oil tankers

      ICE Brent settled above US$86/bbl on Friday as tensions in the Black Sea region increased further after Ukraine declared Russian ports in the Black Sea as ‘war risk’ areas and cautioned ships against using them. Ukrainian drones also attacked a Russian oil tanker over the weekend reflecting heightened tension within the region. The Black Sea route accounts for nearly 15-20% of the oil that Russia sells daily on global markets and is also a major transit corridor for Kazakh crude.

      In the recent JMMC meeting, the OPEC+ group noted its satisfaction regarding the compliance with the output levels by member countries and made no recommendation for any change in production strategy at this stage. The committee recognised the additional voluntary cuts from Saudi Arabia and Russia to balance the oil market. The group has changed the frequency of meetings from once a month to once every two months, with the next meeting scheduled for the first week of October.

      Saudi Arabia increased its official selling price for Asia and Europe for September deliveries following its decision to also extend the output cuts for the month. Saudi Aramco has increased the premium of Arab Light crude for Asian buyers by US$0.30/bbl to US$3.5/bbl for September deliveries. The increment was much steeper for European buyers with the new premium set at US$5.8/bbl compared to US$3.8/bbl for August deliveries. The premium for US buyers was left unchanged at US$7.25/bbl.

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      The latest data from Baker Hughes shows that the US oil rig count declined by four for an eighth consecutive week to 525 over the last week. This is the lowest number of active rigs seen since 18 March 2022. The recent strength in oil prices should have seen higher capital expenditure and increasing rig count in the country, however, the oil exploration companies appear to still be assessing the stability of the current market strength.

      Lastly, the latest positioning data from CFTC show that speculators increased their net long position in NYMEX WTI for a fifth consecutive week by 13,855 lots over the last week, leaving them with net longs of 205,959 lots as of 1 August 2023, the highest since the week ending on 18 April 2023. Meanwhile, money managers increased their net longs in ICE Brent by 18,728 lots over the last week for a second consecutive week, leaving them with 215,368 lots as of last Tuesday.

       

       


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