Recap: Oil prices were mixed on Tuesday, with WTI spending the better part of the session trading to the downside, while Brent held early gains. After posting a fresh multi-year high, but failing to trade above the $72 mark, June WTI slipped below unchanged. July Brent traded over $79 a barrel, reaching a high of $79.47. Prices were lifted by strong Chinese demand, OPEC’s monthly report claiming the global over supply of crude oil is all but depleted and pending U.S. sanctions against Iran. Weighing on WTI was continued increases in U.S. production. About mid-session and for no apparent reason, the two blends switched places, with WTI strengthening against the Brent. For a brief period, Brent dipped below unchanged, while WTI posted gains. June WTI finished the session with a 35 cent gain, to settle at $71.34, while Brent settled at $78.43, up 20 cents.
Geopolitical risk continues to hammer the Brent/WTI spread, with WTI’s discount to Brent reaching -$8.06, the widest this spread has traded since April of 2015. As the outright market bounced all over the place, so did this spread, managing to overcome its loses to settle at -$7.06, after reaching a low of -$8.06. Traders have been positioning themselves in wake of the U.S. vacating the nuclear arms deal with Iran, and are now keeping a close eye on the situation in the Gaza Strip.
June RBOB rose 0.6% to $2.213 a gallon, while June heating oil added nearly 0.3% to $2.255 a gallon.
Fundamental News: The head of Iran’s Atomic Energy Organization, Ali Akbar Salehi, said that the European Union should make up for the US withdrawal from the nuclear deal or Iran will increase its nuclear program to a level more advanced than before the accord. Meanwhile, Tehran’s government spokesman, Mohammad Bagher Nobakht, said Iran will restart its uranium enrichment if it cannot find a way to save the 2015 nuclear agreement with the European Union after the US pulled out last week.
Venezuela’s PDVSA bought nearly $440 million worth of foreign crude and shipped it directly to Cuba. The shipments are the first documented instances of the country buying crude to supply regional allies instead of selling them oil from its own vast reserves. Venezuela made the discounted deliveries despite its need for foreign currency to support its collapsing economy and to import food and medicine amid widespread shortages. The crude purchase came as Venezuela’s crude production fell by 28% in 12 months. Its refineries are operating at a third of its capacity, and its workers are resigning by the thousands. According to diplomats, politicians and PDVSA executives, the subsidized deliveries are aimed at maintaining political support from Cuba, one of a dwindling group of Venezuelan allies.
Meanwhile, ten oil tankers remained anchored on Monday at ports throughout the Caribbean, awaiting payment from Venezuela’s PDVSA to discharge 3.124 million barrels of refined products.
According to US customs data, preliminary US waterborne crude imports increased by 1.36 million bpd to 4.79 million bpd in the week ending May 10th. Imports into the Gulf and West Coasts increased by 1.07 million bpd and 433,000 bpd, respectively. Shipments to the East Coast fell by 144,300 bpd.
According to Bloomberg, crude oil stocks in Cushing, Oklahoma are expected to increase by 550,000 barrels in the week ending May 11th to 37.72 million barrels.
Genscape reported that total gasoline and components shipped to the US from Europe, Baltic and east of Suez refineries was at 1.98 million metric tons in April 2018, a record high.
Early Market Call – as of 8:30 AM EDT
WTI – June $70.97, down 35 cents
RBOB – June $2.1990, down 59 points
HO – June $2.2346, down 1.47 cents
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