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Commodities

China boosts crude oil stockpiles in July amid weak refining: Russell

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By Clyde Russell

LAUNCESTON, Australia (Reuters) -Even though its imports of fell to the lowest in almost two years in July, China continued to boost stockpiles in July as refinery throughput fell for a fourth month.

China, the world’s biggest oil importer, added about 280,000 barrels per day (bpd) to either commercial or strategic inventories in July, according to calculations based on official data.

This was down sharply from June’s addition of 1.48 million bpd, but this still appears bearish when viewed against the fact that crude oil imports dropped to the lowest in July since September 2022.

China doesn’t disclose the volumes of crude flowing into or out of strategic and commercial stockpiles, but an estimate can be made by deducting the amount of crude processed from the total of crude available from imports and domestic output.

China’s refineries processed 59.06 million metric tons of crude in July, equivalent to about 13.91 million bpd, according to data released on Thursday by the National Bureau of Statistics.

This was down 6.1% from the same month last year and was the weakest month on a barrels-per-day basis since October 2022.

Crude imports were 9.97 million bpd in July and domestic output was 4.22 million bpd, given a total of 14.19 million bpd available to refineries.

Subtracting the volume processed of 13.91 million bpd leaves a surplus of 280,000 bpd.

For the first seven months of the year China’s surplus crude amounted to 800,000 bpd.

Oil imports from January to July were 10.89 million bpd and domestic output was 4.28 million bpd, giving a total of 15.17 million bpd available to refiners, of which they processed 14.37 million bpd.

The overall picture that emerges from China crude imports and refinery processing is that the country’s oil sector is unabashedly soft.

Imports have been trending weaker, as has refinery throughput, and this has allowed stockpiles to continue to grow.

OPTIONS

The addition of more crude into storage will also allow China’s refiners the option of further trimming imports should crude prices start to rise again in the event of an escalation in geopolitical tensions, faster demand growth in the rest of the world or further supply tightening by the OPEC+ group.

Of the three above factors that could increase oil prices, the risk of worsening situations in the current Middle East and Russia-Ukraine conflicts is the most realistic.

Demand growth around the world remains muted and OPEC+ is still slated to start withdrawing some of its output cuts from October onwards, although the group has said it can revisit this decision if market conditions aren’t as it expected.

There are already some signs that OPEC+ is re-evaluating its bullish forecast for China’s demand growth in 2024, with the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries (OPEC), which forms the OPEC+ group along with allies including Russia, making a small cut to its China demand estimate in its latest monthly report.

OPEC expects China’s oil demand will rise by 700,000 bpd in 2024, accounting for one-third of the global increase. The August forecast for China’s demand growth is just 60,000 bpd below OPEC’s previous estimate.

With crude imports and refinery processing contracting so far this year, it’s hard to see how any rebound could be strong enough to meet OPEC’s forecast, which is still strong despite the small downward revision.

The International Energy Agency (IEA) is more cautious on China’s demand growth, saying it will account for about one-third of the global total of 950,000 bpd in 2024.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A crude oil terminal under construction is pictured off Ningbo Zhoushan port in Zhejiang province, China January 6, 2018. REUTERS/Stringer/File Photo

This means the IEA expects China’s oil demand growth to be about 313,500 bpd in 2024, which also seems optimistic given the data for the first seven months of the year.

The opinions expressed here are those of the author, a columnist for Reuters.

Commodities

Oil edges higher as US interest rate cut counters weak demand

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By Arunima Kumar

(Reuters) -Oil prices were little changed on Monday after last week’s cut in U.S. interest rates and a dip in supply in the aftermath of Hurricane Francine countered weaker demand from top oil importer China.

futures for November were down by 6 cents, or 0.1%, to $74.43 a barrel by 1253 GMT. U.S. crude futures for November were up 4 cents, or 0.1%, at $71.04.

Oil prices were buoyed last week by the U.S. Federal Reserve’s decision to cut interest rates by 50 basis points and signal further cuts by end of the year, though weaker demand from China is limiting the upside, said Charalampos Pissouros, senior investment analyst at brokerage XM.

Both oil benchmarks rose more than 4% last week.

“Oil looks rangebound despite the uplift to risky asset prices from an outsized policy rate cut by the Fed last week,” said Harry Tchilinguirian, head of research at Onyx Capital Group

“The market will look to flash purchasing managers’ index (PMI) releases in Europe and the U.S. for economic direction, and if these disappoint, then there is likely to be downward pressure developing on oil prices.”

Euro zone business activity contracted sharply and unexpectedly this month as the bloc’s dominant services industry flatlined while a downturn in manufacturing accelerated, a survey showed on Monday.

A softer economic outlook from top consumer China capped further gains.

“There was some hope earlier this morning that some additional Chinese monetary stimulus is likely in the short term, but the latest PMI out of Europe switched market sentiment from positive to negative,” said UBS analyst Giovanni Staunovo.

“I would expect oil to benefit this week from a large U.S. crude draw as result of elevated U.S. crude exports.”

However, heightened conflict in the Middle East could curtail regional supply.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: Storage tanks are seen at Marathon Petroleum's Los Angeles Refinery, which processes domestic & imported crude oil in Carson, California, U.S., March 11, 2022. Picture taken with a drone. REUTERS/Bing Guan/File Photo

The Israeli military launched its most widespread wave of airstrikes against Iran-backed Hezbollah, targeting Lebanon’s south, eastern Bekaa valley and northern region near Syria simultaneously after nearly a year of conflict.

“The market could continue to react to the escalating tensions in the Middle East as confrontations between Israel and Hezbollah continue. Heightened concerns over a broader conflict disrupting regional oil supplies could add upward pressure to the market,” said BDSwiss market strategist Mazen Salhab.

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Commodities

Oil prices edge higher on Middle East tensions, rate cut cheer

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Investing.com– Oil prices edged higher in choppy trade Monday as raised Middle East tensions added to recent gains as the prospect of lower interest rates pushed up hopes that demand will improve. 

At 08:50 ET (12:50 GMT),  rose 0.1% to $73.72 a barrel, while climbed 0.1% to $71.07 a barrel.

Fed rate cut boosts oil, more economic cues awaited 

Crude prices slipped slightly lower after a two-week rebound from near three-year lows, helped by the decision of the Federal Reserve to cut interest rates sharply.

The move pushed up hopes that lower rates will foster economic growth in the coming months, in turn helping spur increased crude demand. 

Both oil benchmarks rose more than 4% last week.

More cues on the Fed are due this week, with a string of officials- most notably – set to speak in the coming days. The Fed’s preferred inflation gauge- data- is also due on Friday. 

Beyond the Fed, the and the are set to meet this week, with both banks likely to cut interest rates. 

Middle East tensions remain in play 

Traders were seen attaching a risk premium to oil prices amid few signs of receding tensions in the Middle East. 

Israel continued to carry out strikes in Gaza and Lebanon, keeping concerns of an all-out war in the region largely in play. Hezbollah had recently vowed retaliation against Israel after the country allegedly detonated several electronic devices used by the Lebanese group. 

The constant fighting and threats of war pushed up concerns that a bigger conflict in the Middle East will disrupt supplies in the oil-rich region, tightening global markets. 

Sentiment “decisively bearish” 

However, analysts at Bank of America noted that “sentiment among energy investors has turned decisively bearish” due to plans by the Organization of the Petroleum Exporting Countries and its allies — known as OPEC+ — to phase out additional voluntary output cuts.

The oil group is set to gradually bring back 2.2 million barrels per day from December 2024 until November 2025, although this timeline was itself earlier delayed by two months.

“Speculative net positioning in total petroleum futures and options recently dropped to the lowest levels since at least 2011, suggesting investors are already more than positioned for a falling energy price environment,” the Bank of America analysts said.

(Ambar Warrick contributed to this article.)

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Oil ends week higher as investors take stock of Fed rate cuts

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By Georgina McCartney

(Reuters) – Oil prices settled lower on Friday but recorded a second straight week of gains, garnering support from a U.S. interest rate cut and a dip in U.S. supply.

futures settled down 39 cents, or 0.52%, at $74.49 a barrel. U.S. WTI crude futures settled down 3 cents, or 0.4%, to $71.92.

Signs of a slowing economy in major commodity consumer China gave prices a ceiling. But for the week, both benchmarks settled up more than 4%.

Prices have recovered after Brent fell below $69 for the first time in nearly three years on Sept. 10.

“The market concluded that a sub-$70 level combined with hedge funds holding a record weak belief in higher prices of crude and fuel products would require a recession to be justified, a risk this week’s bumper U.S. rate cut helped reduce,” Ole Hansen, head of commodity strategy at Saxo Bank, said.

Prices rose more than 1% on Thursday, a day after the U.S. central bank’s decision to cut interest rates by half a percentage point.

Interest rate cuts typically boost economic activity and energy demand, but some analysts are worried about weakness in the U.S. labour market.

“U.S. interest rate cuts have supported risk sentiment, weakened the dollar and supported crude this week,” said Giovanni Staunovo, an analyst at UBS.

“However, it takes time until rate cuts support economic activity and oil demand growth,” he added.

The Fed projected a further 50 basis points of rate cuts by the end of this year, a full percentage point of cuts next year and a further half-percentage-point reduction in 2026.

“The Fed’s decision to cut interest rates and some hangover from Hurricane Francine are the only two things that are propping up the market up right now,” said Tim Snyder, chief economist at Matador Economics.

“The thought of another 50 to 75 basis points has markets hopeful for some degree of economic stability,” he added.

About 6% of crude production and 10% of output in the U.S. Gulf of Mexico were offline in the aftermath of Hurricane Francine, the U.S. Bureau of Safety and Environmental Enforcement said on Thursday in its final update on the storm.

Additional support for oil prices came from a decline in inventories to a one-year low last week. [EIA/S]

Rising tensions in the Middle East, raising the risk of supply disruption, further boosted the oil market. Israel announced on Friday it killed a top Hezbollah commander and other senior figures in the Lebanese movement in an airstrike on Beirut as fears of a wider war rise.

Still, U.S. President Joe Biden said reaching a Gaza ceasefire deal remains realistic, telling reporters: “We have to keep at it.”

In China, refinery output slowed for a fifth straight month in August and industrial output growth hit a five-month low.

© Reuters. FILE PHOTO: A pump jack drills oil crude from the Yates Oilfield in West Texas’s Permian Basin, near Iraan, Texas, U.S., March 17, 2023. REUTERS/Bing Guan/File Photo

China also issued its third and likely final batch of fuel export quotas for the year, keeping volume in line with 2023 levels. “This move indicates that refinery margins are too weak to justify increased activity,” StoneX Analyst Alex Hodes said in a note on Friday.

Meanwhile, oil refiners in Asia, Europe and the U.S. face a drop in profitability to multi-year lows.

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