ADVERTISEMENT

Oil Gains as U.S. Gulf Output and Refineries Halted Before Storm

Oil Rallies as Twin Hurricane Threat Disrupts U.S. Production

Oil Gains as U.S. Gulf Output and Refineries Halted Before Storm
A gas flare is seen at sunset at the Marathon Petroleum oil refinery in Kentucky, U.S. (Photographer: Luke Sharrett/Bloomberg)

Oil rallied and gasoline surged to a five-month high as energy companies suspended offshore operations and refiners shuttered Gulf Coast plants with Tropical Storm Laura expected to strengthen into a hurricane before making landfall later this week.

Around 82% of oil production in the Gulf of Mexico was halted by around midday Monday, with refinery closures from companies including Motiva Enterprises LLC and Valero Energy Corp. potentially shutting in more than 1 million barrels a day of capacity. Gasoline futures rose to their strongest level since before the pandemic on concern over possible fuel shortages. Meanwhile, oil futures rose 0.7% in New York and 1.8% in London.

“The market as of right now is very worried about a shortage of gasoline, and that’s a serious consequence from the storm,” said Bob Yawger, director of the futures division at Mizuho Securities USA.

Oil Gains as U.S. Gulf Output and Refineries Halted Before Storm

The storm comes as U.S. benchmark crude futures have risen this month amid a streak of declines in U.S. crude stockpiles and gasoline inventories. However, the pandemic is still raging across the world, threatening a sustained rebound in consumption.

“Signs of rising cases in Europe and Asia are still weighing on global demand expectations,” TD Securities commodity strategists including Bart Melek wrote in a note. “Weak refinery runs, exports and distillate demand continue to put a damper on the recovery.”

Laura could also have ramifications for global oil flows. Shuttered U.S. refineries could boost gasoline flows from Europe to the U.S. East Coast, depending on how badly plants are hit and whether Colonial Pipeline Co.’s conduit is affected, according to Steve Sawyer, director of refining at energy consultant FGE.

Prices
  • West Texas Intermediate for October added 28 cents to settle at $42.62 a barrel.
  • Brent for the same month rose 78 cents to end the session at $45.13 a barrel.
  • Gasoline rose 6.5% to highest settlement price since March 6.

The storm threat has translated into higher premiums for crudes in the region. Mars Blend rose $1.25 on Monday to $2.85 a barrel over Nymex WTI futures, its highest premium since May, according to data compiled by Bloomberg. WTI crude in Houston rose to its strongest level since July.

Other market drivers
  • Prospects for an imminent truce in oil-rich Libya dimmed after forces loyal to eastern commander Khalifa Haftar scoffed at the United Nations-backed government’s announcement of a cease-fire as “media marketing.”
  • Chinese refiners have massively boosted imports of diluted bitumen in a sign of either their desperation to produce fuel and asphalt for a rebounding economy, or that they’re skirting local import quotas and even international sanctions.
  • Saudi Aramco reshuffled its senior management and created a division focused on “portfolio optimization,” as the world’s biggest oil producer adapts to low crude prices and seeks new ways to raise cash.
  • The United States Oil Fund ETF, ticker USO, posted its largest one-day inflow since April last week even after the Securities and Exchange Commission recommended enforcement action against the fund and its management for disclosures made during market turmoil this year.

©2020 Bloomberg L.P.