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Oil Shorts Soar as Market Shakes Off Saudi Arabian Disruption

Hedge-fund bets on WTI rally are lower than before strike.

Oil Shorts Soar as Market Shakes Off Saudi Arabian Disruption
Crude oil storage tanks stand at Saudi Aramco’s Abqaiq crude oil processing plant following a drone attack in Abqaiq, Saudi Arabia. (Photographer: Faisal Al Nasser/Bloomberg)

(Bloomberg) -- Oil investors piled into short positions as oil markets shook off the disruption from attacks on Saudi Arabian oil facilities.

Bets that West Texas Intermediate crude prices would decline surged 33%, just before prices briefly dipped below pre-attack levels. Money managers are still net long, according to data released Sept. 27 by the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, but wagers on a rally shrank to below where they were before the Sept. 14 strikes that halted half of Saudi oil output.

Oil Shorts Soar as Market Shakes Off Saudi Arabian Disruption

“The initial up-swell in long positions in part was a function of worries that the damage to Saudi facilities was going to take long to fix,” said Stewart Glickman, an energy analyst at CFRA Research Inc. “Now it seems like, by all indications, the Saudis, the majority of their processing capacity, is back.”

With Saudi production mostly back, the market’s focus shifts again to a trade war between the U.S. and China that threatens to slow the world economy and reduce energy consumption. In the latest development, U.S. government officials are considering caps on American money flows into China, a measure with major implications for billions of dollars in investments, according to people familiar with the deliberations.

“The global economy is better off if these trade battles can be solved,” Glickman said. But the skirmish is “not showing signs of ebbing.”

Hedge funds’ WTI net position -- the difference between wagers on an increase and those on a decline -- declined to 198,109 options and futures, compared with 201,168 before the attack, the CFTC data showed. Long positions fell 0.8%, while short-selling surged 33%.

Other Positions
  • Net-bullish wagers on Brent crude fell 5.2% to the lowest since Sept. 3
  • The U.S. gasoline net-long position rose 6.6% to the highest in six weeks
  • The net-position on U.S. diesel rose 5.3% to the highest in seven weeks

To contact the reporters on this story: Carlos Caminada in Calgary at ccaminada1@bloomberg.net;Sheela Tobben in New York at vtobben@bloomberg.net

To contact the editors responsible for this story: Simon Casey at scasey4@bloomberg.net, ;David Marino at dmarino4@bloomberg.net, Joe Carroll, Mike Jeffers

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