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Oil Short-Sellers’ Gloom Deepens With Price Stuck Below $55

Oil Short-Sellers’ Gloom Deepens With Price Stuck Below $55

(Bloomberg) -- Hedge funds are increasingly pessimistic on oil as U.S. stockpiles surge and crude refining plunges.

Bets on a West Texas Intermediate crude rout rose 7.6% in the week ended Oct. 15 and have almost tripled since mid-September, data released Friday show. A report showing American crude storage rose for a fifth week while refiners cut processing rates to the lowest since 2017 only reinforced bearish expectations.

“The perception of falling demand is driving prices lower,” said Bob Iaccino, market strategist at Chicago-based Path Trading Partners. “No one thinks that demand is going to get higher.”

Oil Short-Sellers’ Gloom Deepens With Price Stuck Below $55

The U.S. benchmark oil price has been stuck below $55 a barrel since the start of the month. Adding to the gloomy picture for demand, China reported the slowest pace of economic growth since the early 1990s last quarter. A trade war with the U.S. means the world’s second-largest energy consumer is likely to keep struggling.

Short-selling of WTI crude rose to 114,709 futures and options, up from 106,578 the week prior and just 39,948 in the one ended Sept. 17, according to U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission data. Long bets edged lower by 0.1%, to 201,239 contracts. Money managers’ net-long position, or the difference between the two, shrank 8.8%.

Other Positions
  • Net-bullish wagers on Brent crude dropped 1.6%
  • The U.S. gasoline net-long position jumped 17%
  • Wagers on U.S. diesel flipped to a net-bullish position

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

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