Bachelors degree in Finance, Journalism, and Masters degree in Economics. Member of National Economics Honor Society Small business owner over 25 years. Trading energy futures and options since 2002.
We always get the headlines from the main sources, you know them GDP, up 3.5%, home prices up 10%. Rarely do we ever get the underlying numbers, or an honest analysis. Today's stories on the crude inventory numbers again give the headline number with no analysis. Headline says, "Crude Rises on Decrease in Stocks". Lets take a look at the report. 1) Oil refineries are running at 80.6% of capacity. This is extremely bearish. 2) Refinery inputs were 233,000 barrels per day below last weeks average. Bearish. 3) U.S. Crude oil imports were down 764,000 barrels per day from the previous week. Bearish. 4) For the last 4 weeks imports have averaged 1.5 million barrels per day less than the same period a year ago. Bearish. 5) U.S. crude inventories are near the upper limit of the average range for this time of year. Bearish 6) Total motor gasoline inventories are above the upper limit of the average range. Bearish. 7) Distillate fuel demand is down 14.8% year over year, jet fuel demand down 3.1%. Bearish
There is more, but you should get the picture. A decline in stocks right now is due to a demand problem, not a supply problem. All of the above statistics point directly to a decrease in demand for crude and distillates. If refineries were running at 90+% of capacity, maybe, maybe we could see a supply problem, but not now. One other thing, the latest COT report shows approx. 227,000 money managed fund long contracts and about 24,000 short. As the saying goes,"The market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent." Disclosure : No positions
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Talking Energy
Today's stories on the crude inventory numbers again give the headline number with no analysis. Headline says, "Crude Rises on Decrease in Stocks". Lets take a look at the report.
1) Oil refineries are running at 80.6% of capacity. This is extremely bearish.
2) Refinery inputs were 233,000 barrels per day below last weeks average. Bearish.
3) U.S. Crude oil imports were down 764,000 barrels per day from the previous week. Bearish.
4) For the last 4 weeks imports have averaged 1.5 million barrels per day less than the same period a year ago. Bearish.
5) U.S. crude inventories are near the upper limit of the average range for this time of year. Bearish
6) Total motor gasoline inventories are above the upper limit of the average range. Bearish.
7) Distillate fuel demand is down 14.8% year over year, jet fuel demand down 3.1%.
Bearish
There is more, but you should get the picture. A decline in stocks right now is due to a demand problem, not a supply problem. All of the above statistics point directly to a decrease in demand for crude and distillates. If refineries were running at 90+% of capacity, maybe, maybe we could see a supply problem, but not now.
One other thing, the latest COT report shows approx. 227,000 money managed fund long contracts and about 24,000 short.
As the saying goes,"The market can stay irrational longer than you can stay solvent."
Disclosure : No positions