Updates
December 10, 2020: See first comment. Reader cites builds in crude oil inventories back in April, 2020. The reader is so correct. Look at the builds in crude oil in those five weeks during the month of "April." It was during this period that WTI crashed and on April 20, 2020, actually "went negative."
Week 67 |
March 4, 2020 |
0.8 |
444.1 |
Week 68 |
March 11, 2020 |
7.7 |
451.8 |
Week 69 |
March 18, 2020 |
2.0 |
453.7 |
Week 70 |
March 25, 2020 |
1.6 |
455.4 |
Week 71 |
April 1, 2020 |
13.8 |
469.2 |
Week 72 |
April 8, 2020 |
15.2 |
484.4 |
Week 73 |
April 22, 2020 |
15.0 |
518.6 |
Week 74 |
April 15, 2020 |
19.2 |
503.6 |
Week 75 |
April 29, 2020 |
9.0 |
527.6 |
Week 76 |
May 6, 2020 |
4.6 |
532.2 |
Week 77 |
May 13, 2020 |
-0.7 |
531.5 |
Week 78 |
May 20, 2020 |
-5.0 |
526.5 |
Original Post
This confirms my suspicion that no one knows what is going on. [Assuming the EIA report is not in error and that I'm reading it correctly.] Link here.
Did anyone see this coming?
From the EIA today, holy mackerel:
U.S. commercial crude oil inventories (excluding those in the Strategic Petroleum Reserve) increased by 15.2 million barrels from the previous week.
At 503.2 million barrels, U.S. crude oil inventories are about 11% above the five year average for this time of year.
Total motor gasoline inventories increased by 4.2 million barrels last week and are about 5% above the five year average for this time of year.
Finished gasoline inventories decreased while blending components inventories increased last week.
Distillate fuel inventories increased by 5.2 million barrels last week and are about 11% above the five year average for this time of year.
It will be interesting to see "Focus on Fracking" this Sunday.
Re-balancing (many rows are hidden to keep the spreadsheet short enough to fit on the blog). When I re-started this spreadsheet back in 2018 there was much talk about "re-balancing." US crude oil inventories were at 447 million bbls. Today, a huge, huge inventory build, and US crude oil inventories are now over 500 million bbls.
Based on recent OPEC+ action, they didn't see this coming either.
But someone must have seen it coming: WTI/OPEC/Brent prices barely move.
|
Week |
Date of Report= |
Change |
Million Bbls Storage |
Over/under 5-year average |
0 |
Week 0 |
November 21, 2018 |
4.9 |
446.9 |
|
1 |
Week 1 |
November 28, 2018 |
3.6 |
450.5 |
|
2 |
Week 2 |
December 6, 2018 |
-7.3 |
443.2 |
|
3 |
Week 3 |
December 12, 2018 |
-1.2 |
442.0 |
|
4 |
Week 4 |
December 19, 2018 |
-0.5 |
441.5 |
|
5 |
Week 5 |
December 28, 2018 |
0.0 |
441.4 |
|
82 |
Week 82 |
June 17, 2020 |
1.2 |
539.3 |
15% |
83 |
Week 83 |
June 24, 2020 |
1.4 |
540.7 |
16% |
84 |
Week 84 |
July 1, 2020 |
-7.2 |
533.5 |
15% |
85 |
Week 85 |
July 8, 2020 |
5.7 |
539.2 |
18% |
86 |
Week 86 |
July 15, 2020 |
-7.5 |
531.7 |
17% |
87 |
Week 87 |
July 22, 2020 |
4.9 |
536.6 |
19% |
88 |
Week 88 |
July 29, 2020 |
-10.6 |
526.0 |
17% |
89 |
Week 89 |
August 5, 2020 |
-7.4 |
518.6 |
16% |
90 |
Week 90 |
August 12, 2020 |
-4.5 |
514.1 |
|
102 |
Week 102 |
November 4, 2020 |
-8.0 |
484.4 |
7% |
103 |
Week 103 |
November 12, 2020 |
4.3 |
488.7 |
6% |
104 |
Week 104 |
November 18, 2020 |
8.0 |
489.5 |
|
105 |
Week 105 |
November 25, 2020 |
-0.8 |
488.7 |
6% |
106 |
Week 106 |
December 4, 2020 |
-0.7 |
488.0 |
7% |
107 |
Week 107 |
December 9, 2020 |
15.2 |
503.2 |
11% |
imports were a factor, but underpinning this build was the largest drop in US oil exports on record...otherwise, a lot of this week's metrics were back at the levels of April or May, when we were coming out of the lockdown...so i'll again have a long sub-headline this week...
ReplyDeleteGreat observation. I've posted the US crude oil inventory over the month of "April, 2020" as an update above. It is quite remarkable.
DeleteIt was during that period, April 20th specifically, that WTI crashed and actually "went negative."