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Oil Jumps to One-Year High With Depleting Supplies Aiding Rally

Oil rose past $54 a barrel with help from a falling dollar after jumping the most in three weeks on demand optimism.

Oil Jumps to One-Year High With Depleting Supplies Aiding Rally
Refining towers at an oil refinery in Poland. (Photographer: Bartek Sadowski/Bloomberg)

Oil climbed to the highest level in over a year as tightening global supplies and signs of strength in physical markets aided crude’s virus-recovery rally.

Futures rose 2.3% in New York to the highest in over a year, rising back above $55 a barrel in post-settlement trading after an industry group reported another decline in U.S. stockpiles. Crude has been climbing steadily since late last year as coronavirus vaccines and producers’ supply curbs boost expectations of a tighter market. OPEC and its allies expect to drain an oil surplus by the middle of the year.

Meanwhile, there continues to be signs of strength in the market for physical barrels of oil, with Royal Dutch Shell Plc bidding for more cargoes of benchmark-grade North Sea crude on an S&G Global Platts pricing window. The bids come a day after the oil major staged the heaviest buying by a single company since at least 2008.

“There’s hope around the vaccine rollouts at the same time we’re seeing a lot from the majors and international players about cutting back on production,” said Gary Cunningham, director at Stamford, Connecticut-based Tradition Energy. “Those two factors are combining to keep us toward the upper end of the range.”

Oil Jumps to One-Year High With Depleting Supplies Aiding Rally

The rally in headline crude prices and buying binge in physical markets comes amid a markedly tighter structure in the oil futures curve this year. Nearby Brent timespreads are trading in their biggest backwardation in a year -- a bullish structure where nearer-dated contracts trade at a premium to later-dated ones -- suggesting supply tightness.

Last month’s pledge by Saudi Arabian Energy Minister Prince Abdulaziz bin Salman to slash production by a further 1 million barrels a day has buttressed global markets. On Wednesday, a panel that oversees OPEC’s strategy -- the Joint Ministerial Monitoring Committee -- will convene online to assess the outlook. The JMMC is unlikely to recommend new policies, which will instead be tackled at the next full OPEC+ meeting in early March.

U.S. crude stockpiles fell by over 4 million barrels last week, the industry-funded American Petroleum Institute was said to report ahead of a U.S. government tally. The API report also showed a decline in refined product inventories and a drop in supplies at the nation’s largest storage hub in Cushing, Oklahoma.

Prices
  • WTI for March delivery traded at $55.07 as of 4:41 p.m. in New York after settling at $54.76 a barrel. The contract is at its highest level since late January
  • Brent for April settlement rose $1.11 to end the session at $57.46 a barrel

Still, technical indicators point to prices being due for a pullback, with both Brent and WTI settling above their upper Bollinger bands. At the same time, the near-term impact of the pandemic on demand limits how far crude’s rally can extend. Even amid a spate of unplanned refinery outages that would normally boost gasoline prices on the U.S. Gulf Coast, they are barely causing a ripple as the pandemic continues to cap fuel demand.

See also: U.S. Gulf Coast Gasoline Shrugs Off Multiple Refinery Upsets

Meanwhile, retail investors using online chatrooms like Reddit will be hard pressed to influence other commodity markets beyond silver, Goldman Sachs Group Inc.’s Jeff Currie said in a Bloomberg Television interview.

“When you start to get to markets like oil and natural gas, the liquidity is substantially larger and it becomes that much more difficult to do,” Currie said. “To be the marginal driver in these markets like they were in silver yesterday, is a much larger question mark.”

Other oil-market news:
  • Exxon Mobil Corp. pledged to safeguard the S&P 500 Index’s third-largest dividend after posting its first annual loss in at least 40 years, a show of defiance by an oil driller besieged by activist investors and climate-change campaigners.
  • BP Plc offered more evidence that Big Oil has barely begun to heal the wounds from last year’s slump, posting earnings that missed expectations mainly due to weak fuel sales and refining margins.
  • The nor’easter that paralyzed New York and blanketed the East and Midwest with heavy snow will edge its way along the coast as a blast of Arctic air sweeps behind it, sending temperatures tumbling across the central U.S.
  • OPEC and its allies can celebrate their success in steadying world oil markets when they gather this week. But the coalition will soon be faced with some tough choices.

©2021 Bloomberg L.P.