Crude Oil Prices Fall Due to a Focus on Oil Surplus

Oil pipeline in winter by Robson Machado via Pixabay

August WTI crude oil (CLQ25) on Wednesday closed down -0.14 (-0.21%), and August RBOB gasoline (RBQ25) closed down -0.0256 (-1.18%).

Crude oil prices fell on Wednesday, driven by expectations of a global oil surplus later this year.  Oil prices also saw continued weakness after President Trump on Monday refrained from imposing new sanctions on Russian oil exports, instead issuing more tariff threats.  Oil prices were undercut by Wednesday’s 3-week high in the dollar index.  The weekly EIA report was mixed.

Concern about a global oil glut is negative for crude prices.  On July 5, OPEC+ agreed to raise its crude production by 548,000 barrels per day (bpd) beginning August 1, exceeding expectations of a 411,000 bpd increase.  Saudi Arabia also stated that additional similar-sized increases in crude output could follow, which is viewed as a strategy to reduce oil prices and penalize overproducing OPEC+ members, such as Kazakhstan and Iraq.  OPEC+ is boosting output to reverse the 2-year-long production cut, gradually restoring a total of 2.2 million bpd of production by September 2026.  On May 31, OPEC+ agreed to a 411,000 bpd increase in crude production for July, following the same 411,000 bpd hike for June.  June crude production rose +360,000 bpd to a 1.5-year high of 28.10 million bpd.

In a supportive factor for oil prices, Bloomberg reported last Thursday that OPEC+ is discussing a pause in further production increases from October, following its next monthly hike in September of 548,000 barrels.  OPEC+ may be concerned about a slowdown in global oil demand in the second half of this year that could lead to a supply glut if the group keeps boosting production.  The International Energy Agency said inventories have been accumulating at a rate of 1 million bpd and that global crude oil market faces a surplus by Q4-2025 equivalent to 1.5% of global crude consumption.

A decrease in crude oil held worldwide on tankers is bullish for oil prices.  Vortexa reported Monday that crude oil stored on tankers that have been stationary for at least seven days fell by -4.6% w/w to 78.03 million bbl in the week ended July 11.

Today’s weekly EIA report showed that US crude inventories in the week ended July 11 fell by -3.859 million bbls, the first draw in three weeks.  Gasoline inventories rose +3.399 million bbls, and distillate inventories rose by +4.173 million bbls.  The EIA report showed that (1) US crude oil inventories as of July 11 were -8.0% below the seasonal 5-year average, (2) gasoline inventories were -0.1% below the seasonal 5-year average, and (3) distillate inventories were -21.1% below the 5-year seasonal average.  US crude oil production in the week ending July 11 fell -0.1% w/w to 13.375 million bpd, modestly below the record high of 13.631 million bpd posted in the week of 12/6/2024.

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