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Oil Slump Catches Funds Off Guard in Longest Bull Run Since 2012

Net-long position on Brent rose for eighth straight week.

Oil Slump Catches Funds Off Guard in Longest Bull Run Since 2012
An oil refinery that handles some of the oil production in the Kirkuk, northern Iraq region. (Photographer: Staton R. Winter/Bloomberg News)

(Bloomberg) -- Oil’s sudden slump seems to have caught optimists by surprise.

Hedge funds increased wagers on rising Brent crude prices for an eighth straight week, the longest streak since 2012, according to ICE Futures Europe data for the seven days through Feb. 26.

But the enthusiasm has proved to be misplaced, at least for now. The international benchmark posted a weekly loss for the first time since early February as President Donald Trump warned OPEC to “take it easy" in cutting supplies and U.S. economic data fell short of expectations. Brent lost 3.1 percent for the week, after rising 25 percent to start the year.

Oil Slump Catches Funds Off Guard in Longest Bull Run Since 2012

Crude has rallied this year as Russia and the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries curbed output to offset a global supply glut, while U.S. sanctions isolated major suppliers Iran and Venezuela. Yet an uneven economic outlook, record-smashing American production and worries about the U.S.-China trade war have cast a shadow over sentiment.

“It’s sort of really push-pull in the short term between some fairly constructive bullish set-up on the supply side but really overshadowed by questions on the demand side," said Tamar Essner, director for energy and utilities at Nasdaq Corporate Solutions in New York. “At the same time, you also have Trump doing everything to push for lower oil prices."

Hedge fund bets suggest they believe the longer-term picture is still bright. OPEC production fell by more than a half-million barrels in February, according to a Bloomberg survey. U.S. drilling-rig activity, meanwhile, hit a 9-month low last week, as investors push companies for spending cuts amid the uncertain outlook.

“We’re continuing to see evidence these rig counts are falling," said Ashley Petersen, lead oil market analyst at Stratas Advisors in New York. “We’re getting this on-the-ground evidence of a more stable supply picture.”

Here’s a look at how hedge funds bet:

  • Net-long positions -- the difference between wagers on a Brent rally and those on a fall -- grew 5.8 percent to 291,336 futures and options positions.
  • Long-only positions rose 4.1 percent to the highest in four months.
  • Short-only positions fell 3.6 percent, reaching the lowest point in a month.

The latest information on West Texas Intermediate positioning wasn’t available, as the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission is still releasing older data following the government shutdown. The agency is expected to finally issue up-to-date numbers next Friday.

To contact the reporters on this story: Alex Nussbaum in New York at anussbaum1@bloomberg.net;Ben Foldy in New York at bfoldy@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Simon Casey at scasey4@bloomberg.net, Carlos Caminada

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