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Get me out of my long WTI June position!!!!

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SEB - analysbrev på råvaror
SEB - Prognoser på råvaror - Commodity

Right now, we have a “467 million barrels of financial “get me out of here” taking place in the WTI June contract. After seeing what happened to the WTI May contract on Monday (traded down to minus $40/bl) most everyone with a long position in the WTI June contract are now most likely heading for the door if they can. This is the burning down of long oil ETFs which are holding the lion’s share of the long positions in the WTI June contract. Yesterday there was an exit of 115 million barrels from the June contract leaving 467 million barrels to go. The intense sell-off in the WTI June contract is dragging down the Brent June contract.

Bjarne Schieldrop, Chief analyst commodities at SEB
Bjarne Schieldrop, Chief analyst commodities, SEB

Most ETF’s have very strict rules describing how they should place investors money. Mostly it is placed in the first or the second contract and rolled forward according to explicit rules as time passes. I.e. the ETF’s are mostly rule-based, and it doesn’t matter what the managers of the oil ETFs think about oil one way or the other.

The next major roll from June to July is from May 5 to 8. The biggest of these ETFs, The US Oil fund (USO) has now however decided to change its rules and fully exit the WTI June contract of which it held 137 million barrels of on Monday.

Monday’s price event in the WTI May contract shocked the market into understanding what can/will happen to oil prices the moment inventories reach capacity: Price collapse. Not necessarily down to negative prices as we saw on Monday, but definitely price collapse.

WTI and Brent crude oil prices are much more strongly tied together a little bit out on the curve like June. As investors are now fleeing the WTI June contract with an intense selling pressure as a result this selling pressure is rubbing off on the Brent June contract as well. Much more so than when the selling pressure was focused on the May WTI contract at the very front of the curve as was the case on Monday. But now the Brent June is dragged down along with the WTI June contract.

The Brent contract is however not at all land-locked in the same way as the WTI contract which is price off the inland point of Cushing Oklahoma. Physical Brent crude can easily flow across the world and utilize any remaining opening in storage capacity. Either onshore or floating.

The Brent crude oil benchmark is thus much less vulnerable for the kind of events which unfolded on Monday for the WTI May contract. Inventories are none the less filling up around the world. Very Large Crude Carriers (VLCCs) are reported to sail around at sea with no buyers carrying crude from Saudi Arabia. So even the seaborne market is starting to saturate, and it is gradually becoming more difficult to even place Brent crude cargoes into the seaborne market. As a reflection of this Saudi Arabia is now discounting its oil versus both Brent crude and the Dubai crude marker at the steepest discount ever.

A lot of the remaining open position in the WTI June contract is held by long oil ETFs which cannot exit at free will and have to follow explicit rolling rules. Thus, we won’t get an all-out exit of the remaining 467 million barrels of open positions right away. But investors holding these ETFs can take exit and force the ETFs to take exit from the WTI June contract.

Brent crude for average delivery in 2021 traded all the way down to $34.5/bl today but is now back up at $36/bl again. Our standing recommendation has been to buy oil and oil products for 2021 delivery when these forward prices reach ball-park $35/bl. We still hold that view even if there is definitely going to be more turmoil ahead.

Analys

Crude inventories builds, diesel remain low

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SEB - analysbrev på råvaror

U.S. commercial crude inventories posted a 3-million-barrel build last week, according to the DOE, bringing total stocks to 426.7 million barrels – now 6% below the five-year seasonal average. The official figure came in above Tuesday’s API estimate of a 1.5-million-barrel increase.

Ole R. Hvalbye, Analyst Commodities, SEB
Ole R. Hvalbye, Analyst Commodities, SEB

Gasoline inventories fell by 0.8 million barrels, bringing levels roughly in line with the five-year norm. The composition was mixed, with finished gasoline stocks rising, while blending components declined.

Diesel inventories rose by 0.7 million barrels, broadly in line with the API’s earlier reading of a 0.3-million-barrel increase. Despite the weekly build, distillate stocks remain 15% below the five-year average, highlighting continued tightness in diesel supply.

Total commercial petroleum inventories (crude and products combined, excluding SPR) rose by 7.5 million barrels on the week, bringing total stocks to 1,267 million barrels. While inventories are improving, they remain below historical norms – especially in distillates, where the market remains structurally tight.

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Analys

OPEC+ will have to make cuts before year end to stay credible

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SEB - analysbrev på råvaror

Falling 8 out of the last 10 days with some rebound this morning. Brent crude fell 0.7% yesterday to USD 65.63/b and traded in an intraday range of USD 65.01 – 66.33/b. Brent has now declined eight out of the last ten days. It is now trading on par with USD 65/b where it on average traded from early April (after ’Liberation day’) to early June (before Israel-Iran hostilities). This morning it is rebounding a little to USD 66/b.

Bjarne Schieldrop, Chief analyst commodities, SEB
Bjarne Schieldrop, Chief analyst commodities, SEB

Russia lifting production a bit slower, but still faster than it should. News that Russia will not hike production by more than 85 kb/d per month from July to November in order to pay back its ’production debt’ due to previous production breaches is helping to stem the decline in Brent crude a little. While this kind of restraint from Russia (and also Iraq) has been widely expected, it carries more weight when Russia states it explicitly.  It still amounts to a total Russian increase of 425 kb/d which would bring Russian production from 9.1 mb/d in June to 9.5 mb/d in November. To pay back its production debt it shouldn’t increase its production at all before January next year. So some kind of in-between path which probably won’t please Saudi Arabia fully. It could stir some discontent in Saudi Arabia leading it to stay the course on elevated production through the autumn with acceptance for lower prices with ’Russia getting what it is asking for’ for not properly paying down its production debt.

OPEC(+) will have to make cuts before year end to stay credible if IEA’s massive surplus unfolds. In its latest oil market report the IEA estimated a need for oil from OPEC of 27 mb/d in Q3-25, falling to 25.7 mb/d in Q4-25 and averaging 25.7 mb/d in 2026. OPEC produced 28.3 mb/d in July. With its ongoing quota unwind it will likely hit 29 mb/d later this autumn. Staying on that level would imply a running surplus of 3 mb/d or more. A massive surplus which would crush the oil price totally. Saudi Arabia has repeatedly stated that OPEC+ it may cut production again. That this is not a one way street of higher production. If IEA’s projected surplus starts to unfold, then OPEC+ in general and Saudi Arabia specifically must make cuts in order to stay credible versus what it has now repeatedly stated. Credibility is the core currency of Saudi Arabia and OPEC(+). Without credibility it can no longer properly control the oil market as it whishes.

Reactive or proactive cuts? An important question is whether OPEC(+) will be reactive or proactive with respect to likely coming production cuts. If reactive, then the oil price will crash first and then the cuts will be announced.

H2 has a historical tendency for oil price weakness. Worth remembering is that the oil price has a historical tendency of weakening in the second half of the year with OPEC(+) announcing fresh cuts towards the end of the year in order to prevent too much surplus in the first quarter.

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Analys

What OPEC+ is doing, what it is saying and what we are hearing

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SEB - analysbrev på råvaror

Down 4.4% last week with more from OPEC+, a possible truce in Ukraine and weak US data. Brent crude fell 4.4% last week with a close of the week of USD 66.59/b and a range of USD 65.53-69.98/b. Three bearish drivers were at work. One was the decision by OPEC+ V8 to lift its quotas by 547 kb/d in September and thus a full unwind of the 2.2 mb/d of voluntary cuts. The second was the announcement that Trump and Putin will meet on Friday 15 August to discuss the potential for cease fire in Ukraine (without Ukraine). I.e. no immediate new sanctions towards Russia and no secondary sanctions on buyers of Russian oil to any degree that matters for the oil price. The third was the latest disappointing US macro data which indicates that Trump’s tariffs are starting to bite. Brent is down another 1% this morning trading close to USD 66/b. Hopes for a truce on the horizon in Ukraine as Putin meets with Trump in Alaska in Friday 15, is inching oil lower this morning.

Bjarne Schieldrop, Chief analyst commodities, SEB
Bjarne Schieldrop, Chief analyst commodities, SEB

Trump – Putin meets in Alaska. The potential start of a process. No disruption of Russian oil in sight. Trump has invited Putin to Alaska on 15 August to discuss Ukraine. The first such invitation since 2007. Ukraine not being present is bad news for Ukraine. Trump has already suggested ”swapping of territory”. This is not a deal which will be closed on Friday. But rather a start of a process. But Trump is very, very unlikely to slap sanctions on Russian oil while this process is ongoing. I.e. no disruption of Russian oil in sight.

What OPEC+ is doing, what it is saying and what we are hearing. OPEC+ V8 is done unwinding its 2.2 mb/d in September. It doesn’t mean production will increase equally much. Since it started the unwind and up to July (to when we have production data), the increase in quotas has gone up by 1.4 mb/d, while actual production has gone up by less than 0.7 mb/d. Some in the V8 group are unable to increase while others, like Russia and Iraq are paying down previous excess production debt. Russia and Iraq shouldn’t increase production before Jan and Mar next year respectively.

We know that OPEC+ has spare capacity which it will deploy back into the market at some point in time. And with the accelerated time-line for the redeployment of the 2.2 mb/d voluntary cuts it looks like it is happening fast. Faster than we had expected and faster than OPEC+ V8 previously announced.

As bystanders and watchers of the oil market we naturally combine our knowledge of their surplus spare capacity with their accelerated quota unwind and the combination of that is naturally bearish. Amid this we are not really able to hear or believe OPEC+ when they say that they are ready to cut again if needed. Instead we are kind of drowning our selves out in a combo of ”surplus spare capacity” and ”rapid unwind” to conclude that we are now on a highway to a bear market where OPEC+ closes its eyes to price and blindly takes back market share whatever it costs. But that is not what the group is saying. Maybe we should listen a little.

That doesn’t mean we are bullish for oil in 2026. But we may not be on a ”highway to bear market” either where OPEC+ is blind to the price. 

Saudi OSPs to Asia in September at third highest since Feb 2024. Saudi Arabia lifted its official selling prices to Asia for September to the third highest since February 2024. That is not a sign that Saudi Arabia is pushing oil out the door at any cost.

Saudi Arabia OSPs to Asia in September at third highest since Feb 2024

Saudi Arabia OSPs to Asia in September at third highest since Feb 2024
Source: SEB calculations, graph and highlights, Bloomberg data
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