Oil Jumps On Inventories Despite Biggest Production Increase In 15 Months

With oil sliding after last night's surprise gasoline build from API (and headlines from the middle east), all eyes are on today's DOE data. As opposed to API, DOE reported a major drawdown in gasoline (-2.7mm) and along with draws in Crude and Cushing, oil prices jumped (despite a big build in distillates). Oil held gains despitye the biggest surge in US crude production since May 2015.

API

  • Crude -1.007m (+950k exp)
  • Cushing -680k (+100k exp)
  • Gasoline +2.167m (biggest in six months)
  • Distillates +2.406m

DOE

  • Crude  -2.508m (+950k exp)
  • Cushing -724k (+500k exp)
  • Gasoline -2.724m (-1.7m exp)
  • Distillates +1.939m (-600k exp)

After 3 weeks of builds, crude inventories fell this week:

US Crude production rose by the most since May 2015…Lower 48 production up 100,000 BOE, Alaska up 52,000 BOE . TOTAL: +152,000 BOE

 

As has been the case recently, investors were looking at gasoline stocks, which declined by 2.7MM, more than the 1.638MM expected, and in linewith last week's -2.8MM draw. 

The gasoline stocks breakdown by region:

  • PADD1 70.125mb -0.790
  • PADD2 48.618mb -2.351
  • PADD3 76.595mb -0.672
  • PADD4 7.105mb -0.376
  • PADD5 30.215mb +1.464

Curiously, gasoline stocks now appear to be declining faster than normal, suggesting excess supply is being exported…

 

… as gasoline demand actually fell by -0.007mbpd to 9.762.

 

Gasoline imports to the critical PADD1, i.e., east coast region, slowed to 538,000bd from 794,000 last week.

 

Meanwhile, overall crude oil imports slowed modestly from 8.4mm b/d to 8.2mm b/d.

* * *

The also reaction in crude makes little sense as the production surge is trumped by a drop in gasoline inventories, and as algos trip stops on the upside.

 

Charts: Bloomberg

via http://ift.tt/2b196Jy Tyler Durden

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