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Macroscope
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Macroscope | Crude spreads remain firm in face of ‘massive oversupply’

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Strong petrol demand in the US could go some way to explain why prices are higher and stocks lower than expected. Photo: AP

The oil market was massively oversupplied in the second quarter and remains so today, the International Energy Agency (IEA) wrote in its latest monthly oil market report.

“The market’s ability to absorb that oversupply is unlikely to last. Onshore storage space is limited. So is the tanker fleet. New refineries do not get built every day. Something has to give,” the agency warned starkly.

If so, someone forgot to tell the futures markets, where timespreads have remained firm and give no indication storage might be running out.

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Brent and WTI futures imply the market is willing to pay less than 45 US cents per barrel per month to finance and store crude on average over the next half-year, down from more than US$1 at times between January and March.

According to the IEA, global crude oil stocks should have risen by a massive 3.3 million barrels per day between April and June given the reported imbalance between supply and demand.

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In the face of such a massive implied stock build, the agency wondered why prices had not fallen more sharply, and where the oil ended up, given reported stockpiles increased by just one-third of the implied amount.

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