Recap: The oil markets basically kept moving higher again on Friday, as economic indicators continued to surprise market participants by the resiliency of the U.S. economy. In addition growing market whispers that the Saudis are looking to sell additional shares in Saudi Aramco as well as seeking higher oil revenues to fund the Crown Prince’s ambitious spending plans probably kept traders seeing little downside risk to this market. Add to this the market going into a long holiday weekend during the heart of the Atlantic hurricane season, the perceived risk is to the upside not the downside. As a result, the NYMEX WTI contract finished the session up $1.39 per barrels at $85.02 per barrel after reaching a high on the day of $85.81 a barrel, the highest level since November 16th. Brent though clawed back some of its premium over WTI on Friday after lagging behind WTI on Thursday, as it settled up $1.66 at $88.49 and once again knocking on the door of a $90 per barrel key chart target.
Fundamental News: The U.S. Labor Department reported Friday morning the unemployment rate rose to 3.8% last month This was higher than the 3.5% rate most economists had been expecting. Nonfarm payrolls increased by 187,000 jobs in August versus a market expectation of 170,000 job additions.
Bloomberg estimates that Saudi crude oil exports in August fell sharply to just 5.6 million b/d, the lowest monthly level since March 2021. July exports were estimated at 6.3 million b/d. Bloomberg also noted that according to ship tracking services, exports out of Kuwait, appear also to have declined in August to just 1.5 million b/d, the lowest since late 2016.
Baker Hughes reported Friday afternoon that for the week ending September 1st, U.S. energy firms reduced the number of active oil and gas wells declined for the eighth week in a row, dropping by one rig this week to 631 rigs. The number of oil rigs was unchanged at 512 rigs while natural gas rigs stood at stood at 114, down 1 rig for the week reaching its lowest level since January 2022.
IIR Energy reported that U.S. oil refiners are expected to shut in about 620,000 bpd of capacity in the week ending September 1st, cutting available refining capacity by 118,000 bpd. Offline capacity is expected to fall to 372,000 bpd in the week ending September 8th before increasing to 524,000 bpd in the subsequent week.
Colonial Pipeline notified customers that it is allocating space for Cycle 52 on Line 1, its main gasoline line which has a capacity of 1.2 million b/d.
The Wall Street Journal was reporting Friday that Saudi Aramco is considering selling a stake worth as much as $50 billion through a secondary share offering after consultations with advisers. The sale could happen before the end of the year and be carried out on the Riyadh exchange to avoid legal risks associated with an international listing.
The CFTC reproted Friday afternoon that hedge funds increased their net length in the the NYMEX and ICE WTI futuress and options contracts by 19,040 contract to a net long position of 152,876 lots. But hedge funds decreasedf their net long position in RBOB and Heating oil by 4,788 and 925 contract respectively.
Early Market Call – as of 8:48 AM EDT
WTI – October $85.29, down 26 cents
RBOB – October $2.6053, up 1.41 cents
HO – October $3.1710, up 6.6 cents
View the Sprague Refined Products Market Watch Report in a downloadable pdf format by clicking below.
Click to view more online:
Heating Oil Supplier
Diesel Supplier
View market updates
View our refined products glossary
Go to SpraguePORT online