Crude hits new high on inventory lows
Nymex West Texas Intermediate for May delivery rose $2.37, or 2.2%, to close at $110.87 on Nymex, following an intraday record high of $112.21/bbl.
The 3.1 million-barrel drop in crude-oil stockpiles reported by the Department of Energy (DoE) sent the price up. Gasoline futures also surged by 2.6% on the news, according to Bloomberg.
Analysts note that a slowdown in imports is partly responsible for the inventory drop as US demand remains robust, despite comments this week from Guy Caruso of the Energy Information Administration that summer gasoline demand will shrink for the first time since 1991 due to the weakness in the US economy.
“Now is not the time to talk of weakening fundamentals in the US,” noted Barclays Capital in a research report.
“Relative to the normal seasonal pattern US oil product inventories have been falling at a rapid rate of 0.61 mb/d over a concerted period of three weeks. Further, that transition has occurred without any excessive build in crude inventories,” it said.
More on Oil & refined products
Energy Risk at 30: Learning from the past
Energy Risk looks back at the seminal events and developments that have shaped today’s energy markets
Why Iran tensions failed to rattle markets
Despite initial fears, traders say risks were signposted and investors had deleveraged after April
Oil and products house of the year: Macquarie Group
Energy Risk Awards: Bank pioneers innovative deals in illiquid markets, taking on esoteric risk
Podcast: should negative oil prices be allowed?
Did negative oil prices signify the market was operating effectively, or that something was wrong?
Podcast: the future of retail investment in oil
Will negative prices and big losses curb retail investors’ appetite for oil futures over the longer term?
Podcast: Kaminski and Ronn on negative oil and options pricing
The market is gravitating to the Bachelier model as an alternative to Black 76
Negative oil prices put spotlight on investors
What part did Bank of China and other investors play in last month’s oil rout, asks derivatives veteran
How Onyx came from nowhere to conquer oil swaps
In just four years, market-maker has become the largest provider of liquidity in energy derivatives