Crude oil prices surged to a two-month high on Monday

Recap: Crude oil prices surged to a two-month high on Monday, with June WTI trading at a high of $33.32, the highest level a spot contract traded since March 16. The rally was fueled by positive results for a Covid-19 vaccine, while major producers continue to hold back on output. WTI June delivery rose $2.39, or 8.1%, to settle at $31.82 a barrel. The June contract expires at Tuesday’s settlement and investors have been attuned to the potential for volatility in crude prices after the May contract marked a historic traverse into subzero territory on April 20. The July which is the most-actively traded and is soon to be the front-month contract climbed $2.13, or 7.2%, to finish the session at $31.65 a barrel. July Brent crude gained $2.31, or 7.1%, to settle at $34.81 a barrel. Front-month prices, just like WTI, settled at the highest since March 11. June RBOB ended up 5.7%, to settle at $1.0258 a gallon, while June heating oil added 9.3% to settle at $1.0064 a gallon.

Technical Analysis:  Leading technical indicators are supportive for this market, as the 10-day moving average is converging upon the 50-day moving average. These averages are set at $26.96 and $27.43 respectively, for the July contract. Moving oscillators are also trending higher. There is a gap between $37.64 and $41.88 in the July contract, and given the current technical scenario, we would look for a push to fill this gap. That being said, it will be a struggle to the upside. Resistance before the gap is set at the psychological level of $35. To the downside, there is support set at $30 and below that at $27.70.

Fundamental News: Genscape reported that crude oil stocks held in Cushing, Oklahoma in the week ending Friday, May 15th fell by 5,177,044 barrels and by 2,208,589 barrels from Tuesday, May 12th to 59,859,890 barrels.

A record volume of diesel is expected to reach Europe from the East in May after lockdown measures due to the coronavirus pandemic left refiners in Asia and the Middle East with excess volumes of fuel. Over 3 million tons of diesel are expected to arrive in Europe in May, up from a previous record of 2.8 million tons in June last year.

Kuwait’s Al Rai newspaper reported that Kuwait and Saudi Arabia have agreed to halt oil production from the joint Al-Khafji field for one month, starting June 1st.

The Joint Organizations Data Initiative stated that Saudi Arabia’s crude oil exports in March increased to 7.391 million bpd from 7.278 million bpd in February.  Saudi Arabia’s oil production in March fell by 51,000 bpd on the month to 9.733 million bpd. The country’s crude stocks increased by 2.963 million barrels to 156.249 million barrels in March. Saudi Arabia’s refinery crude throughput fell by 244,000 bpd to 1.068 million bpd in March.

OPEC+ has cut its oil exports sharply in the first half of May, suggesting a strong start in complying with a new production cut agreement. Kpler, a company that tracks oil flows, said OPEC+ seaborne crude oil exports fell by 6.3 million bpd over the past month towards 27 million bpd.  Saudi Arabia is showing the largest cutback.  Saudi oil exports have averaged 7.26 million bpd, down 2.24 million bpd on the month.  Russia cut its output by 922,000 bpd in May.  Also, Kuwait and the UAE loaded a combined 4.25 million bpd onto ships for export, down 1.26 million bpd on the month. Meanwhile, Petrologistics estimated that OPEC members cut crude oil exports by 4.85 million bpd in the first 14 days for May.

IIR Energy reported that US oil refiners are expected to shut in about 3.3 million bpd of capacity in the week ending May 22nd, increasing available refining capacity by 877,000 bpd from the previous week.  Offline capacity is expected to fall to 2.8 million bpd in the week ending May 29th.

Early Market Call – as of 8:44 AM EDT

WTI – June $32.53 up 71 cents

RBOB – June $1.0385 up 1.27 cents

HO – June $1.0070 up 6 points

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This market update is provided for information purposes only and is not intended as advice on any transaction nor is it a solicitation to buy or sell commodities. Sprague makes no representations or warranties with respect to the contents of such news, including, without limitation, its accuracy and completeness, and Sprague shall not be responsible for the consequence of reliance upon any opinions, statements, projections and analyses presented herein or for any omission or error in fact. The views expressed in this material are through the period as of the date of this report and are subject to change based on market and other conditions. This document contains certain statements that may be deemed forward-looking statements. Please note that any such statements are not guarantees of any future performance or results and actual results or developments may differ materially from those projected. The whole or any part of this work may not be reproduced, copied, or transmitted or any of its contents disclosed to third parties without Sprague’s express written consent.