Aug WTI crude oil (CLQ22) on Monday closed down -0.70 (-0.67%), and Aug RBOB gasoline (RBQ22) closed up +1.51 (+0.44%).
Crude oil prices Monday fell due to the +0.9% rally in the dollar index to a new 20-year high. Â Crude oil prices were also undercut by Monday's sell-off in U.S. stocks and by continued concern about new Chinese lock-downs due to Covid outbreaks. Â There were 69 Covid infections reported in Shanghai on Sunday, the highest since late May.
Crude oil prices were also undercut after a court in the Krasnodar region on Monday canceled an order by the Russian government to suspend shipments of crude oil from the CPC terminal on Russia's Black Sea Coast. Â That order was seen as an attempt by the Russian government to halt shipments of Kazakh crude oil to Europe to punish Europe for its sanctions on Russia. Â The terminal ships 1.2 million barrels per day of oil to Europe.
Lower OPEC crude production is supportive of prices. Â Despite OPEC+ agreement to raise crude oil output, OPEC crude production in June fell by -120,000 bpd to 26.6 million bpd. Â Nigerian and Libyan crude output fell in June due to damaged pipelines in Nigeria and political unrest in Libya, undercutting the overall OPEC+ production level.
Crude oil has support from ongoing concern that Russia may use energy as a weapon against countries that imposed sanctions for its attack on Ukraine. Â Russia has already halted natural gas shipments to Demark, Finland, Bulgaria, the Netherlands, and Poland and reduced supplies to Germany for not paying for Russian gas in rubles. Â Russia is trying to force its European customers to pay rubles for its oil and gas exports.
In a bullish factor, Vortexa reported Monday that the amount of crude stored on tankers in the week ended July 8 that have been stationary for at least a week fell -13% w/w to 82.09 million bbl.
Last Thursday's EIA report showed that (1) U.S. crude oil inventories as of July 1 were -10.8% below the seasonal 5-year average, (2) gasoline inventories were -9.1% below the 5-year average, and (3) distillate inventories were -21.3% below the 5-year average. Â U.S. crude oil production in the week ended July 1 was unchanged at a 2-year high of 12.1 million bpd, -1.0 million bpd (-7.6%) below the Feb-2020 record-high of 13.1 million bpd.
Baker Hughes reported last Friday that active U.S. oil rigs in the week ended July 8 rose by +2 rigs to a 2-1/4 year high of 597 rigs. Â U.S. active oil rigs have more than tripled from the 17-year low of 172 rigs seen in Aug 2020, signaling an increase in U.S. crude oil production capacity.
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