Oil jumps on hopes of increased demand as lockdowns ease

London — Oil prices gained on Wednesday after US stockpiles rose less than expected and petrol stocks fell, and were buoyed by hopes that demand will improve as some European countries and US cities moved to ease coronavirus lockdowns.

June Brent crude futures were up 2.30%, or 47c, to $20.93 a barrel by 8.34am GMT, after hitting $21.60 a barrel. The more active July contract added 22c, or 0.97%, to $22.96 a barrel.

US West Texas Intermediate (WTI) crude futures jumped 12.56% or $1.55 to $13.89 after a 27% plunge over the first two days of this week.

US crude inventories rose by 10-million barrels to 510-million barrels in the week to April 24, data from industry group the American Petroleum Institute (API) showed on Tuesday, compared with analysts’ expectations for a build of 10.6-million barrels.

Petrol stocks fell by 1.1-million barrels, the API said, compared with analyst forecasts for a 2.5-million barrel rise.

“In part thanks to better than expected or, more accurately, not as bad as feared-looking US inventory data, WTI prices have managed to make up lost ground,” JBC Energy said.

“Aside from a Cushing build that was hardly extravagant, API inventory data reportedly also hinted at the first petrol stock draw in several weeks, a signal optimistic market observers tend to like,” the JBC analysts said.

The market will get another read on US inventories when the US Energy Information Administration (EIA) releases weekly data later on Wednesday.

While storage is rapidly filling up, production cuts by US shale producers, estimated by consultants Rystad Energy at 300,000 barrels per day (bpd) for May and June, should help slow flows into tanks. The US is now the world’s biggest oil producer.

“One ray of hope for WTI though could occur next week,” said Jeffrey Halley, market analyst at Oanda. Regulators in the US state of Texas, the country’s biggest oil producer, will hold a vote on May 5 on whether to enact output cuts.

Officials in the states of North Dakota and Oklahoma are also examining ways to legally allow output cuts.

That would add to production cuts of almost 10-million bpd agreed by oil cartel Opec and other large producers including Russia (Opec+), equivalent to about 10% of global production which are due to take effect from May 1.

At the same time, hopes for at least some demand recovery put a floor under oil prices, following two days of selling in June contracts by exchange-traded funds looking to avoid the extreme volatility that hit the WTI May futures contract last week.

Said Lachlan Shaw, head of commodity research at National Australia Bank in Melbourne, “The other thing coming through is more detail and a louder groundswell towards plans for removing Covid-19 restrictions, particularly in Europe — in countries such as Spain, France, Austria and Switzerland. That’s going to see demand pick up.” 

Reuters

Source: businesslive.co.za