Oil: Sentiment improves for now – ING
Oil markets strengthened yesterday as sanction risks against Russia increase, while the market appears to be losing hope that we’ll see a nuclear deal between the US and Iran. This might’ve led to the eventual lifting of oil sanctions. The market is also rising on news that the US Court of International Trade ruled President Trump’s 'Liberation Day' tariffs overstepped his authority, blocking the levies. The Trump administration said it's appealing the decision, ING's commodity experts Ewa Manthey and Warren Patterson note.
Crude Oil rallies as OPEC+ output decision looms
"Meanwhile, oil markets must contend with OPEC+ coming decision on July output levels at a meeting on Saturday. We're assuming the group will agree on another large supply increase of 411k b/d. We expect similar increases through until the end of the third quarter, as the group increases its focus on defending market share. Yesterday, OPEC+ ratified broader group production quotas through until the end of 2026. This weekend’s decision relates to additional voluntary cuts that some members had previously made."
"Inventory data from the American Petroleum Institute overnight was fairly constructive. It showed US crude oil inventories fell by 4.24m barrels over the last week, while stocks at Cushing dropped by 342k barrels. It was more of a mixed bag for refined products. Gasoline inventories declined by 528k barrels, while distillate stocks increased by 1.3m barrels."
"The latest positioning data shows that investment funds increased their net long in the Title Transfer Facility (TTF) by 16.5TWh over the last reporting week, leaving them with a net long of a little over 100TWh. This was predominantly driven by fresh buying amid Norwegian outages. It’s the largest position speculators have held in TTF since early April."