Ramped up operations on the North Sea pipeline and a jump in the US oil rig count have further fueled the recent freefall in oil prices

Recap:  Oil prices fell to their lowest level since December, with March WTI falling as much as 5% on the day, reaching a low of $58.07, and April Brent slipping as much as 3.1% to a daily low of $61.77. The recent freefall in prices, which was fostered by healthy U.S. production and a falling global stock market, was further fueled by ramped up operations on the North Sea pipeline and a jump in the U.S. oil rig count. Prices traded sideways within a narrow range in overnight trading but quickly fell into a freefall as the U.S. stock market opened. The break in WTI below several technical areas of support, aided in pushing prices to their lowest level in 8 weeks. As the stock market rebounded, so did the price of crude oil. March WTI ended the week at $59.20 a barrel, down $1.95, or 3.19%, while April Brent slipped $2.02, or 3.12%, to close the week at $62.179 a barrel  

Fundamental News: Bloomberg reported Friday morning the Forties oil pipeline system still has not returned to full operating levels despite being restarted on Thursday. According to some trade sources Forties production is not expected to reach full production rates until the weekend.

Baker Hughes reported Friday afternoon that U.S. energy companies added some 26 oil drilling rigs this week, boosting total rigs in operation at 791 rigs, the highest level since April 2015. The increase during the current week was the biggest weekly increase since January 2017. More than half of the gain in rigs came in the Permian basin.

OPEC shipments are expected to rise by 80,000 b/d to 24.25 million b/d in the four week period ending February 24th according to Oil Movements.

IIR said Friday that it is estimating U.S. oil refiners had some 1.273 million b/d of refining capacity offline for the week ending February 9th. This total was some 433,000 b/d more than the previous week. The research company was already estimating that U.S. refiners would have some 1.447 million barrels offline for the week ending February 16th.

Eurostock data release Friday showed that European inventories of crude oil and refined products at the end of January were down more than 6% from a year earlier. The biggest decline year on year was in middle distillates which were down some 49.38 million barrels or 10.8%. But overall stocks in January rose some 21.56 million barrels over December levels with crude stocks growing by 2.9% from the previous month.

Irving’s 70,000 b/d FCC unit at its St. John’s refinery which had been shut down on Thursday was restarted early Friday morning.

Philadelphia Energy Solutions reported Friday that it has restarted a reformer unit at the Girard Point section of its Philadelphia refinery as well as returning to service an alkylation unit at the Point Breeze section of its refinery.

Early Market Call – as of 9:00 AM EDT

WTI – Mar $59.85, up 65 cents

RBOB – Mar $1.7074, up 75 points

HO – Mar $1.8562, up 9 points

View the Sprague Refined Products Market Watch Report in a downloadable pdf format by clicking below.

Click to view more online:
View market updates
View our refined products glossary
Go to SpraguePORT online

Share:
RSS
Follow by Email
Facebook
X (Twitter)

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.