Showing posts with label Best-of-Trading. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Best-of-Trading. Show all posts

Friday, January 21, 2011

Factbox: Top 10 reasons why 2011 isn't 2008 for oil markets










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NEW YORK | Mon Jan 3, 2011
asr: get all the graphs in one page saved and pasted for our blog copy ... these are very precious and imp...

(Reuters) - Oil prices are heading toward $100 a barrel again, just over three years after they first touched triple digits on the first trading day of 2008.

Analysts are not expecting a replay of 2008, however, when prices roared to a record high over $147 a barrel before crashing down below $33 at the end of the year.

Below is a factbox on major differences between the current oil market situation and three years ago.

1) SPARE OIL PRODUCTION CAPACITY

Markets have a greater supply cushion in 2011 than they did in 2008. Analysts estimate OPEC has extra capacity of between 5-6 million barrels per day (bpd) of output it could bring on, primarily from Saudi Arabia, to cool off overheated markets, according to a Reuters poll.

Spare OPEC capacity had dipped to around 1.5 million bpd in 2008, but Saudi Arabia has since brought on new capacity.

In addition, Iraq, which is not subject to OPEC production ceilings is expected to add 400,000 barrels per day of output in 2011, according to government officials.

(OPEC spare capacity: r.reuters.com/wev29q )


2) SPARE OIL REFINING CAPACITY

Limited spare global refining capacity also helped push up prices in 2008, but since then significant extra capacity has been added in emerging markets such as India and China. In addition, U.S. refiners have capacity shut in due to low margins, which could be brought back online if needed.

Global refining capacity rose by 2.2 percent in 2009, supported by a nearly 600,000 bpd rise in India and a 800,000 bpd increase from China, according to the 2010 BP Statistical Review. (Graphic: link.reuters.com/kuc44r )

In addition, more complex refining capacity has been added to the market, capable of refining lower-quality crude. In 2008, a lack of desulpherization capacity helped drive up prices for higher quality crude needed to produce lower sulphur products.


3) INVENTORIES

Crude stockpiles held by OECD countries have jumped since 2008, giving the group more padding to compensate for any supply disruption. OECD days of forward demand cover hit 60 in the third quarter of 2010, up from 53 days three years ago, as the economic crisis hit demand. (Graphic:link.reuters.com/muq29q )

4) GLOBAL DEMAND

While global demand fell in 2008 from record highs in 2007, consumption rebounded strongly in 2010 and is expected to rise by 1.43 million bpd to a record 87.78 million bpd in 2011. Analysts polled by Reuters in December estimated demand rising to 88.6 million bpd.

5) RESOURCE NATIONALISM

Resource nationalism among oil-producing nations was on the rise in 2008, with governments cutting back supplies to increase prices, taking larger stakes in projects and revising terms for current and future projects.

Countries such as Venezuela and Russia, which were at the fore of the movement in 2008, currently are seeking greater foreign investment as part of efforts to boost oil output.

6) THE DOLLAR ISN'T FALLING

A drop in the dollar against the euro to record lows in 2008 helped drive oil's rise to record highs, boosting commodities denominated in the greenback.

The dollar firmed in the fourth quarter of 2010, however, due to eurozone sovereign debt woes and expectations of a stronger U.S. economy, adding another potential check to rising oil prices. (Graphic:link.reuters.com/kyj54r )

The dollar and oil prices showed a strong negative correlation for much of 2010, reaching nearly 75 percent in November on a 25-day basis. The negative correlation eased in December, however, dipping to under 17 percent in thin holiday trade at the end of the month.

7) SUBSIDIES HAVE BEEN REDUCED

Fuel subsidies in key emerging economies such as China and India, the backbone of global demand growth over the past decade, have been reduced since 2008, exposing consumers there to higher costs to help check runaway consumption.

China hiked fuel prices in 2009, after averaging 7 percent annual oil demand growth 2004-2008, as part of efforts to curb wasteful consumption. Petrol prices in India have risen 17 percent since deregulation in June.

8) PEAK OIL

Concerns oil had neared peak global production levels helped drive up prices in 2008, led by gains in the far end of the futures curve.

Increased production from unconventional in countries such as Canada and deepwater plays such as Brazil have since have eased this concern, helping ease concerns about future supply.

Total proved oil reserves, including Canadian oil sands, rose from 1,475.7 billion barrels in 2008 to 1,476.4 billion barrels in 2009, according to the BP 2010 statistical review.

Markets are also keeping an eye on growing production for U.S. shale oil deposits, which could raise supplies and ease prices in the giant U.S. market as shale gas did for natural gas markets.

9) NATURAL GAS IS CHEAP, AND WILL REMAIN SO

Prices for U.S. natural gas, which competes with refined products, are about half the average of $8 per million British termal unit seen in 2008, due mainly to the explosion of production from U.S. shale.

According to the latest estimate from the U.S. Energy Information Administration, total marketed U.S. natural gas production in 2010 rose more than 3 pct to 22.66 trillion cubic feet, the highest level since 1973.

10) INVESTORS GO ACTIVE, SEEKING ALPHA

Investors are now investing in commodities in order to chase absolute returns, as opposed to seeking to diversify their portfolios as in 2008. To increase alpha, they are taking a more active approach to managing their commodities exposures, compared with the huge cash pushed into passive, long only investments in the run up to 2008.

According to Barclays Capital, 43 percent of commodities investors will be seeking to invest in the asset class through actively managed portfolios in 2011.

(Editing by David Gregorio)

A Primer On Oil Indicators



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A Primer On Oil Indicators
Written by Brad Zigler
January 20, 2011 12:09 pm EST

Every week, when the U.S. Energy Department releases its petroleum inventory data, we take an in-depth look at the oil market, using several indicators measuring the industry's health from a refiner's standpoint (for examples, see the Wednesday Weekly Oil Roundup editions of Brad's Desktop).

The thinking behind this approach is simple. Better-informed consumers are less likely to be surprised by shifting price trends in crude oil and refined products, such as gasoline and heating oil. Investors, too, are better served if they understand the price pressures at the refining level.

The presentation of these indicators, however, prompts more than a little head scratching among new readers. "What's the significance of the differential in refining margins?" asks one reader. Another inquires: "Why should I care about a three-month roll in WTI futures?"

So, just as we did with our Friday Inflation Scorecard columns ("Deciphering The Inflation Scorecard: Why Gold?" and "Deciphering The Inflation Scorecard: Part 2"), we've put together a guide to our Wednesday Weekly Oil Roundup indicators.

Oil Refining Margins – Not all refiners are alike. Refiners make choices about the products they turn out based on equipment availability and market demand. Some refiners may concentrate on the production of lighter distillates, such as gasoline, while others tend to produce higher proportions of middle fuels, such as diesel and heating oil.

For lighter distillate refineries, a 3-2-1 "crack" is used as the standard mix: three barrels of crude oil yields two barrels of gasoline and one barrel of heating oil.

Refiners leaning toward middle distillates are proxied by a 2-1-1 crack: two barrels of crude oil yields one barrel each of gasoline and heating oil (heating oil and diesel are chemically similar and likewise priced alike).

Gross refining margins are derived by dividing the proceeds of product sales by the cost of the crude oil inputs. When the economy's perking along, selling gasoline is favored over diesel and heating oil, since consumers tend to drive more, increasing gasoline demand. Petrol consumption, in contrast, declines in bad times, along with motor fuel prices.

Thus, the peaks and valleys in the margin differential often confirm broad economic trends. 3-2-1 runs will tend to move to a premium over 2-1-1 operations in boom times and reverse to a discount in downturns.

Refining Margin Differentials Vs. S&P 500

Refining Margin Differentials Vs. S&P 500


Average Daily Volume and Open Interest – Week-to-week changes in volume give shape to a price trend. An increase in volume adds strength to a trend, while a decline makes it suspect.

Open interest represents the number of unliquidated contracts, or potential volume, extant. When open interest builds, traders flood into the market, while declining open interest denotes a liquidating market. Stronger price trends—both bullish and bearish—are accompanied by rises in volume and open interest.

CBOE Oil Volatility Index (OVX) – The Chicago Board Options Exchange tracks the implied volatility embedded in options on the United States Oil Fund (NYSE Arca: USO) in its OVX index. The index is a clue to traders' near-term expectations. The number—currently 27.28—represents the annualized expected volatility in USO prices over the next 30 days. A relatively low reading means options are "cheap," favoring their purchase, while high values make it more attractive to sell. Generally speaking, as oil prices fall, volatility tends to rise, while it declines in a bull market.

CBOE Oil Volatility Index (OVX)

CBOE Oil Volatility Index (OVX)

Protective Put Prices – The CBOE Crude Oil Volatility Index derives its value from a universe of calls and puts. The Oil Put index, though, only considers put prices as the cost of insurance on a long oil position. An upward spike in the index often precedes a significant price break, while low values suggest trader complacency with oil prices.

Heating Oil/Gasoline Spread – A spread represents a paired futures position—long one contract, short another. Spreads capture a developing discount or premium between the two contracts.

Conventionally, the first contact specified is bought, the second sold. Thus, the HO/RB spread consists of buying heating oil and selling RBOB gasoline. Heating oil tends to move to a premium over gasoline in winter and early spring, but generally loses ground to trade at a discount in the summer driving season.



Heating Oil (HO)/Gasoline (RB) Cracks

Heating Oil (HO)/Gasoline (RB) Cracks

Corn/Ethanol Crush – The U.S. manufacture of ethanol—an alcohol additive to motor fuel—is based upon corn. Rising corn prices reduce the crush yield if ethanol prices fail to rise apace. At times, the correlation between corn and ethanol prices rise, at other times it falls.

Presently, inflation in corn prices outstrips that of ethanol, reducing refiners' yields. Thus, the price of gasoline and ethanol can be compared to determine the relative attractiveness of adding alcohol in the fuel mix.

Ethanol Crush

Ethanol Crush

Brent/WTI Premium/Discount – The benchmark grade for European crude oil is Brent—which is extracted from North Sea oil fields—while the U.S. uses West Texas Intermediate crude. The U.S. grade is lighter and sweeter—meaning it is less viscous and lower in sulphur—than North Sea oil and, consequently, it tends to trade at a premium. Supply considerations, however, can cause a disruption in the normal spread. Presently, a relative glut of WTI to North Sea oil has caused Brent to trade at a substantial premium to WTI. To a certain point, this improves the competitiveness of Canadian oil (the U.S.' largest foreign supplier).

WTI Contango/Inversion – The spread between the price of the near-month NYMEX contract and the one for delivery three months later reflects the market's perceptions about oil supply. When near months bid higher than the price of later deliveries, there's not enough product to carry over—a condition known as "inversion," or "backwardation." This tightness in supply usually translates into high overall prices. The converse—where lower prices in front months and progressively higher prices in distant deliveries, often known as "contango"—describes a market well-supplied with oil.

You should now have a handle on our Wednesday numbers. Hopefully, this little primer will help you make sense of our weekly reports on this critical market sector. Your questions, of course, are still welcomed.

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

Trading Wisdom from my own


AmiBroker

TOP


-- asr: look at the 6 rules on this post , Kirk is like this guy , very practical knowledge which can apply to CL and me .

asr: following was added on 10/12/2011 :

a0/ see this mathemataica 3D model displayed for languages on this link http://reference.wolfram.com/mathematica/ref/Histogram3D.html
- we need to display this kind of 3D chart of OIL contract for NOVEMER month for last 5/10 years , just of NOV month
a1/ We need to develop a 'RANK ' system for CL trade ( see some ideas of 'Rabbit Q Rank' below )
- we can have our CL factors such as these for the RANK
- identify next day H1/H2/H3 L1/L2/L3 ( based on previous day 'price AT Volume' )
- EMA85/EMA15: 85% bars are above EMA(50) line -- BULLISH day , only 15 % or less bars are above EMA(50) line -- BEARISH day
- price by VOlume - price buckets : bucket 1: 30% traded at 85.50 , bucket 2: 20% traded at 84.0 etc..
- EURO , S&P , GOLD relative values based RANK ...
- Vantage Point Phigh/PLow based Rank
- Stochastic, MACD , ATR stop based Rank
- VSA Volume Spread Analysis based Rank

and finally we need Rank at different prices for tomorrow. Assume we are at 8pm ET at the evening at the end of the day .
- we need to project RANK for CL for tomorrow at different price levels. Say CL closed today at 85.20 , we can have tommrow CL rank like this
88 - Rank 20 -- assume this is 10.30 am EST ( after 1 hour trading) , based on S&P , EURO , GOLD % gains on top of yesterday CL can have this values at 10;30 AM .
83 - Rank 80
85 - Rank 70

Tools: It seems we can use Scipy /. R instead of Mathamatica as Scipy is free ( with web iterfaces) http://stackoverflow.com/questions/1944261/when-to-choose-r-vs-scipy
use both for this purpose and though i am far from systematic in selecting one for a given task, here's my list:



R seems simple here: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/R_(programming_language) , seems to have GUI also ...

a2/ write (and record video like Kirk ) narrative so far what you have seen on Price Action that way you DEVELOP your thought process and you can perfect your CL price prediction thought process.
a3 / use the araticles in this search PAGE basaed on ATR :
b/ see Kirkreport Videos, I need to do same videos for CL/OIL for a month stating postives/negatives for the week ( as he listed in the transript of weekly video )
c/ Have weekly Support /Resistance range to guide daily trades
d/ using ATR ( see Amibroker ) stops , and using Amibroker 'Optimizer' to find correct values ( not only for ATR even other tests ). here Amibroker is great use those features
e/ use our 'price buckets' ( example: 20% volume traded at 84.50 yesterday ) concept, this gives good values to trade today ( price Volume indicator )
f/ use VP phigh/plow of the day
g/ use seasonal patterns and historical last 15 years moores charts

master what you all ready have and know:

1/ having VP PHigh/PLow at hand every day and use it
2/ have historical intra day 5 min data , ready to analyze with Amibroker and SQL query on web ( last week down > 5% , monday open Buy/close sell result )
3/ have VSA/VPA on Amibroker ( master: effort to rise, test for supply , psedo thrust etc..) and see those days in the past as shown in 2/ what VSA signals you got that day
4/ Expectancy and R : master and apply (see blog post here) , enter trades only with 3R return for 1 Risk


5/ CL Technical Setups:
- draw Trend Lines and have comments , Trend lines on Volume also ...

- write ( record video like Kirk ) narrative so far what you have seen on Price Action
-- which level supported , what broken, compared to prev day buckets where is H1/L1 , H2/L2 etc.. any of them reached
-- any reversal from .95/.45 or next .15/ .65

- EMA9/EMA50 at 95% and 80% ( same for up and down days)
- price Buckets/ H1/L1 : price buckets based on volume traded previous day , say 102.50 traded 30% volume traded at 102.50 , 20% at 103.0 etc... Based on these price buckets, project H1/H2/H3 , L1/L2/L3 for next day
- support broken/Retrace back : SHORT entry: 100.0 broken to 99.85 , retraced to 100.50 this is SHORT
- Resistance broken/retrace back: LONG entry: on 5/10/11 103.45 broken to 103.65 , then retraced to 102.30 level .. get in for LONG
- Bull FLAG channel : happens very often in CL , some days low point can be 'prev Bar' base , then RISE ..
- Bear flag channel: in CL usually no Bare Flag Channels , coz it drops so fast.
- Fib Retracements: 25% retracement always happen , 33% most of the time ... ( BUY opposite side call/put to position your self for the FIB as I did on 5/10/11 )

6/ CL Psychological/Sentiment Setups:
- condition: condition 2 days dropping last 15 min. $2 in CL , next day POP $2 in last 15 min.
- using Europe session: to condition opposite side of what is coming next morning session in CL .. so that you can TRAP easily for your (Hedgies)SIDE
- monday/tuesday Down in April ( geo-political ) , Thu/Friday UP

good Technical Basics
MACD:

Percentage Volume Oscillator


Relative PRice - for us CL relative price with EURO, S&P, GOLD is important

Rabbitt Q-RanK

-asr: we should have our own Q rank for CL based on EUR , S&P , GOLD - Video here
example Here , also we can develop this kind of RANK easily with Amibroker


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[[ This describes who I am ]]

In Dr. Steenbarger’s book Enhancing Trader Performance he called it “trader’s niche”, which captures your imagination, creativity, skill, talent and interest.

When operating within my niche, discipline becomes natural. I need “discipline” to do my math homework or to figure out Matlab codes. Yet, I could easily spend 8 hours straight trying to figure out my trade pattern, reviewing my trading video, writing my trade journal, playing around my performance metrics, or thinking of what the F* happened that I lost on a trade but was right on the direction?

“Discipline” is unnecessary since trading is fun for me. I get “high” playing around trade ideas and performance research just as much as executing and managing trades.
So if your job or career doesn’t give you the “performance high” and you need tremendous “discipline” to do the “right” thing, you might be in the wrong field.

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Thursday, January 6, 2011

Non-OPEC Supply, OECD Demand are Key as Oil Eyes $100

Non-OPEC Supply, OECD Demand are Key as Oil Eyes $100

asr: check his old articles on Seeking Alpha ( sumit ROy )


By Sumit Roy,
03 January 2011 02:57 GMT
DailyFX Rss Feeds Share

After falling for two years in a row, oil demand rebounded sharply in 2010 to reach a new record high. At 87.4 million barrels per day, the year’s demand rose by 2.4mmbbl/d, or 2.8%, according to figures from the International Energy Agency. That is the fastest growth since 2004.

Non_OPEC_Supply_OECD_Demand_are_Key_as_Oil_Eyes_100_body_Chart_3.png, Non-OPEC Supply, OECD Demand are Key as Oil Eyes $100

Much of 2010’s robust growth can be attributed to recovery from an especially dismal 2008 and 2009. The steep declines in consumption we saw in developed economies were partially reversed, though Europe put in yet another decline. Demand in the region has not risen since 2004. North America fared better, as demand rose almost 0.6mmbbl/d.

While demand from developed economies bounced back, that from emerging markets absolutely surged. Non-OECD consumption rose by a full 2mmbbl/d, representing over 80% of the year’s total demand growth. China alone accounted for 0.7mmbbl/d of said demand, or 30% of total demand growth.

Non_OPEC_Supply_OECD_Demand_are_Key_as_Oil_Eyes_100_body_Chart_4.png, Non-OPEC Supply, OECD Demand are Key as Oil Eyes $100

Taking a look at the other side of balances, supply also put in an impressive performance in 2010. In particular, non-OPEC supply rose by 1.1mmbbl/d, or 2.1%, its best showing since 2004 when it rose by 2.4%. This took the burden off of OPEC, which saw its crude output climb a modest 0.5mmbbl/d, as the cartel maintained a solid level of spare capacity. Effective spare capacity stands at 5.56mmbbl/d per the IEA, well above the 1-3mmbbl/d level back during the last oil bull market during the 2003-2008 period.

Non_OPEC_Supply_OECD_Demand_are_Key_as_Oil_Eyes_100_body_Chart_5.png, Non-OPEC Supply, OECD Demand are Key as Oil Eyes $100

A fairly balanced year for supply and demand had inventories in the OECD steady. But while inventories are largely flat year-over-year, they are well below the mid-summer peak and trending lower. Moreover, floating storage has more than halved from a year ago, standing at 64 million barrels in November, down from a peak of 154 million barrels at the end of 2009.

Non_OPEC_Supply_OECD_Demand_are_Key_as_Oil_Eyes_100_body_Chart_6.png, Non-OPEC Supply, OECD Demand are Key as Oil Eyes $100

Turning to the new year, the IEA sees demand growth slowing to 1.4mmbbl/d, or 1.6%, in 2011, close to the 2005-2007 average growth rate of 1.7%. Non-OECD growth will slow from 5.1% to 3.9%, which is just slightly below the 2005 to 2007 average of 4.1%. OECD demand is expected to resume its structural decline, dropping by 0.2mmbbl/d. Prior to 2010, OECD demand had fallen in every year since 2005 as the new high oil price paradigm led to increasing conservation and advances in efficiencies.

On the supply side, non-OPEC production may rise by 0.6mmbbl/d, or 1.1%, nearly half the growth rate of 2010. Somewhat surprisingly, the IEA sees North American production falling 0.2mmbbl/d after rising 0.5mmbbl/d due in part to drilling restriction in the Gulf of Mexico that were instituted following the BP Macondo well disaster. But furious drilling onshore in North America continues, which has enabled U.S. production to reach a six-year high. It is very possible that the IEA could be underestimating non-OPEC production growth.

At 29.2mmbbl/d, OPEC crude oil production stands only slightly below the IEA’s estimate of the 29.5mmbbl/d that will be necessary to keep OECD inventories flat in 2011. Of course, there are many risks to this outlook. As we stated previously, non-OPEC production growth could surprise to the upside. That would loosen the market, all else equal. On the other hand, in the event OECD demand surprises to the upside- bucking the call for resumption in the secular decline- that would tighten the market more than expected.

All things considered, benchmark crudes have accounted for quite a bit of bullishness with prices sitting in the mid-$90’s. There will likely need to be evidence that the market has tightened more-than-expected before a move into the triple digits. As stated above, the bullish wildcard is demand growth from developed economies, while the bearish wildcard is non-OPEC supply. Additional variables to consider include China’s demand growth as the country’s central bank tightens monetary policy and OPEC crude supply as Iraq lifts production and quota compliance falls due to higher prices.

Non_OPEC_Supply_OECD_Demand_are_Key_as_Oil_Eyes_100_body_Chart_7.png, Non-OPEC Supply, OECD Demand are Key as Oil Eyes $100

DailyFX provides forex news on the economic reports and political events that influence the currency market.
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good OIL daily report

asr: great site , it has all the charts and commentary. see last Cushing invetory comment "WTI remains at an extremely substantial $5+ discount to Brent and $7+ discount to LLS thanks in part to the persistent glut at Cushing. "

Crude Oil Inventory Watch: Inventories Plunge, WTI Discount Grows

By Sumit Roy,
06 January 2011 01:09 GMT
DailyFX Rss Feeds Share

Inventories

The Department of Energy reported that in the week ending December 31st, 2010, U.S. crude oil inventories decreased by 4.1 million barrels, gasoline inventories increased by 3.3 million barrels, distillate inventories increased by 1.1 million barrels, and total petroleum inventories decreased by 6.3 million barrels.

Crude_Oil_Inventories_Watch_Inventories_Plunge_WTI_Discount_Grows_body_Picture_3.png, Crude Oil Inventory Watch: Inventories Plunge, WTI Discount Grows

U.S. petroleum inventories continue to plunge. 9 of the last 10 weeks have seen a decline in the total petroleum surplus, which now stands at 49 million barrels, or 4.8%, down from 5.5% last week and less than half of the 110 million, or 10.7% surplus back in September. Most benchmark crudes are reflecting this apparent tightening of the physical market with Brent near $96 and LLS near $98.

Crude_Oil_Inventories_Watch_Inventories_Plunge_WTI_Discount_Grows_body_Picture_4.png, Crude Oil Inventory Watch: Inventories Plunge, WTI Discount Grows

Crude oil inventories fell much more than normal. Levels are now 21 million, or 6.8% above the 5-year average versus 7.7% last week.

Crude_Oil_Inventories_Watch_Inventories_Plunge_WTI_Discount_Grows_body_Picture_5.png, Crude Oil Inventory Watch: Inventories Plunge, WTI Discount Grows

Product inventories continue to be well-supplied thanks to high levels of refinery utilization.

Crude_Oil_Inventories_Watch_Inventories_Plunge_WTI_Discount_Grows_body_Picture_6.png, Crude Oil Inventory Watch: Inventories Plunge, WTI Discount Grows

Crude_Oil_Inventories_Watch_Inventories_Plunge_WTI_Discount_Grows_body_Picture_7.png, Crude Oil Inventory Watch: Inventories Plunge, WTI Discount Grows

Demand

Demand fell sharply week-over-week in part due to the storms that have been bombarding parts of the nation. Nevertheless, on a four-week rolling basis demand is up 4.4% year-over-year. Gasoline demand is up 2.8% and distillate demand is up 3.8%.

Crude_Oil_Inventories_Watch_Inventories_Plunge_WTI_Discount_Grows_body_Picture_8.png, Crude Oil Inventory Watch: Inventories Plunge, WTI Discount GrowsCrude_Oil_Inventories_Watch_Inventories_Plunge_WTI_Discount_Grows_body_Picture_9.png, Crude Oil Inventory Watch: Inventories Plunge, WTI Discount Grows

Crude_Oil_Inventories_Watch_Inventories_Plunge_WTI_Discount_Grows_body_Picture_10.png, Crude Oil Inventory Watch: Inventories Plunge, WTI Discount Grows

Imports

Crude oil imports fell about 0.4mmbbld/s week-over-week, but total imports including products fell a much more substantial 1.3mmbbl/d. Gasoline imports, in particular, fell to the lowest level in six years.

Crude_Oil_Inventories_Watch_Inventories_Plunge_WTI_Discount_Grows_body_Picture_11.png, Crude Oil Inventory Watch: Inventories Plunge, WTI Discount GrowsCrude_Oil_Inventories_Watch_Inventories_Plunge_WTI_Discount_Grows_body_Picture_12.png, Crude Oil Inventory Watch: Inventories Plunge, WTI Discount Grows

Crude_Oil_Inventories_Watch_Inventories_Plunge_WTI_Discount_Grows_body_Picture_13.png, Crude Oil Inventory Watch: Inventories Plunge, WTI Discount Grows

Refinery Activity

Refinery utilization ticked higher from 88.7 % to 88% and remains above the 5-year average. Even so, gasoline production fell nearly 350k barrels per day, while distillate production was steady.

Crude_Oil_Inventories_Watch_Inventories_Plunge_WTI_Discount_Grows_body_Picture_14.png, Crude Oil Inventory Watch: Inventories Plunge, WTI Discount Grows

Crude_Oil_Inventories_Watch_Inventories_Plunge_WTI_Discount_Grows_body_Picture_15.png, Crude Oil Inventory Watch: Inventories Plunge, WTI Discount Grows

Crude_Oil_Inventories_Watch_Inventories_Plunge_WTI_Discount_Grows_body_Picture_16.png, Crude Oil Inventory Watch: Inventories Plunge, WTI Discount Grows

Miscellaneous

U.S. crude oil production was slightly higher week-over-week and remains remarkably stable near six-year highs. The weekly dataset indicates that U.S. crude production was up 187,000 barrels per day, or 3.5% in 2010.

Crude_Oil_Inventories_Watch_Inventories_Plunge_WTI_Discount_Grows_body_Picture_17.png, Crude Oil Inventory Watch: Inventories Plunge, WTI Discount Grows

Inventories at the NYMEX delivery point, Cushing, Oklahoma rose 0.9 million barrels last week. Front month calendar spreads widened week-over-week from -0.91 to -1.16. WTI remains at an extremely substantial $5+ discount to Brent and $7+ discount to LLS thanks in part to the persistent glut at Cushing.

Crude_Oil_Inventories_Watch_Inventories_Plunge_WTI_Discount_Grows_body_Picture_18.png, Crude Oil Inventory Watch: Inventories Plunge, WTI Discount Grows

DailyFX provides forex news on the economic reports and political events that influence the currency market.
Learn currency trading with a free practice account and charts from FXCM.