Free Trial

Oil End of Day Summary: WTI Set for Weekly Losses

OIL

WTI is set for weekly losses despite rising on the day - recovering some of the steep losses during the middle of the week. WTI has ticked down slightly from its intraday high of $77.70/b at 18:03 GMT (13:03 ET) despite US rig count data showing a fall on the week. The timid demand outlook continues to weigh on prices and limit upside movements. WTI is currently set for weekly losses of around 4% on the week, and down 8% on the month.

  • WTI DEC 23 up 2.2% at 77.39$/bbl
  • WTI DEC 23-JAN 24 up 0.03$/bbl at 0.02$/bbl
  • The ICE and Nymex commitments of traders reports are due for release after the close today at 18:30GMT and 15:30ET. Crude and ICE Gasoil managed money net long positions last week fell to the lowest since early July.
  • Brent crude futures aggregate open interest has continued to fall this week following a drop after the Dec23 contract expiry. ICE Brent open interest is down to the lowest since January at 2.042m yesterday from over 2.2m at the end of October.
  • The latest Baker Hughes rig count data is due for release at 13:00ET.
  • OPEC+ crude oil output rose by 180kbpd month on month in October to 42.71mbpd, amid higher output from Iraq and Iran according to the latest Platts survey.
  • OPEC+ production among the 19 members subject to quotas was up 70k b/d on the month in October to 36.27m b/d, according to estimates by Argus.
  • An extension to Saudi Arabia’s 1mbpd voluntary oil production cuts is very probable, as the market would otherwise risk a very high supply surplus in the first half of next year, Commerzbank said in a note.
  • One major European refiner requested a smaller than normal contractual volume of crude from Saudi Aramco for December delivery according to Bloomberg sources.
  • Urals crude oil prices at Russian ports have softened and are trending towards levels set by the G7 price cap, according to Nasdaq citing Reuters’ trading sources.
  • China bought an average of 1.05mbpd of Iranian oil in the first ten months of this year, Vortexa ship-tracking data showed, 60% above pre-sanction peaks in 20217, Chinese customs data showed, cited by Reuters.
  • Iraq’s oil ministry confirmed its commitment and support of the OPEC+ production quotas, following reports of higher crude oil exports in October, INA reported.
  • Libya aims to almost double its crude production to 2mb/d over the next 3‒5 years investing US$4 billion a year however various obstacles may hinder the plans according to Wood Mackenzie. Libyan National Oil Corporation (NOC) is keen to keep the oil flowing and maximise state revenues.
  • Two key buyers of Canadian heavy crude are set to boost their imports of Venezuelan crudes, possible replacing Canadian crude demand, ArgusMedia said.
  • India is looking to diversify its oil purchases and is possibly looking at Venezuela, as high global prices have pulled down the country's crude imports according to S&P Commodity Insights.
  • Abu Dhabi National Oil Co. plans to retain more supplies of Upper Zakum crude for domestic use in the Ruwais refinery. Adnoc is considering supplying less to buyers under long-term contracts starting in 2024 according to Bloomberg sources.
  • Global oil inventories have removed the builds of the previous two month and are now at their lowest since at least the start of 2017, Kpler data showed.
  • Loadings of Caspian CPC blend are forecasted to be 1.4-1.5m b/d in December, traders told Bloomberg.

To read the full story

Close

Why MNI

MNI is the leading provider

of intelligence and analysis on the Global Fixed Income, Foreign Exchange and Energy markets. We use an innovative combination of real-time analysis, deep fundamental research and journalism to provide unique and actionable insights for traders and investors. Our "All signal, no noise" approach drives an intelligence service that is succinct and timely, which is highly regarded by our time constrained client base.

Our Head Office is in London with offices in Chicago, Washington and Beijing, as well as an on the ground presence in other major financial centres across the world.