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Today’s markets: Export sales jobless claims

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We started off the day with Export Sales and Jobless Claims at 7:30 A.M. Central followed by EIA Gas Storage at 9:30 A.M. On the Corn front we are looking ahead to Export Sales data and allegedly the last punch from Old Man Winter. In the overnight electronic session the May Corn is currently trading at 382 ½ which is a ½ of a cent lower. The trading range has been 383 ½ to 382 ¼. On the Ethanol front the May contract is currently trading at 1.509 which is .007 higher. The trading range has been 1.509 to 1.506. 4 contracts changed hands and the Open Interest is at 703 contracts. The market is currently showing 2 bids @ 1.505 and 1 offer @ 1.509. On the Crude Oil front the market is rolling after the weekly inventory data and the market is pushing to achieve $70 a barrel in today’s trading session. The Saudi’s did politic that they want to see $100 a barrel and in his boom or bust industry this could become reality with another super cycle with global demand outpacing supplies. We also have First Notice Day in the May contract and in the overnight electronic session the May contract is currently trading at 6943 which is 96 points higher. The trading range has been 6956 to 6862. On the Natural Gas front we have the weekly EIA Gas Storage data and the Thomson Reuters poll with 23 analysts participating expect draws ranging from 7 bcf to 30 bcf with the median draw of 23 bcf. This compares to the one-year build of 71 bcf and the five-year average build of 60 bcf. In the overnight electronic session the May contract is currently trading at 2.719 which 2 cents lower. The trading range has been 2.751 to 2.712.

— Daniel Flynn

 

The Energy Report: Overnight sensation

While many are thinking that the sharp rise in the price of oil is an overnight sensation, the reality is that this is a bull market that has been years in the making. When the price of oil double bottomed near $26 a barrel in 2016, I predicted that it would be a generational low and that a new super cycle in oil was being born. At the time I said that, I was in a very distinct minority, as the market mood and many analysts were saying that oil was destined to stay lower for longer. We heard predictions that we may never see oil above $30 or $40 ever again. Yet the arguments that I made, for what I called back then a generational low at that time seemed to be so far out of the mainstream thought, now is being accepted as some of the reasons oil today is at the highest level we have seen since December of 2014.

We warned that a historic cutback in capital investment, despite the glut, would leave the market short of supply despite the current oil glut. We predicted that OPEC would learn their lesson from their failed attempt to flood the market to bring shale oil produced to their knees and would cut production and comply with those cuts. We told you that the historically low oil prices would create a surge in global demand, despite what was the worst start to a stock market in January of 2016 in history. We compared the double bottom at $26 to the double bottom at near $10 in 1998 and 1999 that was forged in the depths of another Asian financial crisis.

Most importantly we warned about a real misunderstanding of the U.S. shale oil industry. We told you that the market was putting too much faith in shale oil as its production is light condensate that U.S. refiners can only take so much of. We warned about the logistical problems with shale that would lead to bottlenecks and raise costs and ultimately slow down shale production. We warned about the fast decline rate of shale wells and the realities of shale production on the ground when it comes to labor, infrastructure and capital investment. The Wall Street Journal now is asking “Is the U.S. Shale Boom Hitting a Bottleneck?” They report about congested pipelines, shortages of materials and workers and warn that it could stand in the way of Permian basin’s continued oil production growth. You have Bloomberg writing that U.S. refiners have hit a ‘shale wall’ not wanting as much light shale oil. Now add to that the rising specter of geopolitical risk against a tightening global supply in a robust global economy and there should be no real surprise why oil is on the rise.

We saw very strong demand in Wednesday’s Energy Information Administrations (EIA) weekly petroleum status report. Gasoline is running at a record for the month of April which is amazing considering all the bad weather. Strong gasoline demand, despite higher prices, suggests that the average consumer is doing well and feeling good about the economy and his or hers place in it. Gasoline supply fell by 2.968 million barrels last week.

Oil supply fell by 1.071 million barrels last week driven by a major 1.115 million barrels drop in Cushing Oklahoma. Distillate supply also fell by a whopping 3.107 million barrels driven by cold weather demand. This came as U.S. crude production rose yet again this week by 15,000 barrels. Crude imports that gave us a surprise increase last week fell by 720,000 barrel a day at 92.4% of their operable capacity. Gasoline production increased last week, averaging 10.2 million barrels per day. Distillate fuel production decreased last week, averaging 5.1 million barrels per day.

Now you have Saudi Arabia saying they want $80 or even $100 a barrel oil. You have concerns about the total collapses of Venezuelan oil output. You have Russian sanctions that have set industrial metals on fire driving up all commodity prices making drilling equipment more expensive. We are in a new super cycle in oil and while it can be ugly up and down at times and risky we are going to continue to move ultimately much higher in price in the coming years.

— Phil Flynn

 

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