EMD026 - Inventory Reality

02/10/2025 5 min
EMD026 - Inventory Reality

Listen "EMD026 - Inventory Reality"

Episode Synopsis


Energy markets digest inventory reality Thursday as EIA data contradicts API expectations, while OPEC+ meeting anticipation and demand concerns pressure prices on October 2, 2025. WTI crude edged up 0.57% to $62.13 per barrel, rebounding slightly after three consecutive days of declines but remaining near four-month lows. Brent rose 0.50% to $65.68, trading near $66 after extended losses. Henry Hub natural gas fell 0.99% to $3.44 per MMBtu following Thursday's storage report. Wednesday's EIA report delivered a reality check. US crude inventories increased 1.79 million barrels for the week ending September 26, contradicting API's surprise 3.67 million barrel draw and surpassing analysts' 1 million barrel build forecast. Total inventories reached 416.5 million barrels, remaining 4% below five-year averages. Gasoline stocks surged 4.1 million barrels—the largest increase since June—while distillates rose 600,000 barrels. The build reflects weakening demand, with US gasoline consumption falling to a six-month low. Refinery operations declined significantly. Inputs averaged 16.2 million barrels per day, down 308,000 bpd from the previous week, with utilization dropping to 91.4% from 93% due to seasonal maintenance. Crude imports fell 662,000 bpd to 5.8 million bpd, down 7.5% year-over-year over the last four weeks. Cushing hub stocks decreased 271,000 barrels, providing limited support. Natural gas storage came in below seasonal norms. The EIA reported a 66 Bcf injection for the week ending September 26, below the 85 Bcf five-year average and consensus expectations. Total working gas reached 3,574 Bcf, remaining 6.1% above five-year averages. The below-average build supports the EIA's Q4 forecast of $3.70 per MMBtu, driven by flat production and rising LNG exports. OPEC+ meeting anticipation weighs on markets. The October 5 gathering may approve output increases of 411,000 to 500,000 barrels per day for November, though OPEC cautioned the higher figure is "misleading". The group has cumulatively raised quotas over 2.5 million bpd since April's voluntary cut unwinding began. Global crude exports are forecast to surge 600,000 bpd in October to an all-time high of 41 million bpd, driven by Middle East shipments, particularly Saudi Arabia. The IEA projects a record global oil market surplus for 2026, with Brent crude expected to average $59-$62 per barrel in Q4 2025 and potentially $49-$50 by early 2026. Combined with weakening Asian demand and potential US government shutdown uncertainties, oversupply concerns dominate despite geopolitical premiums. Kurdish exports progressed. Turkey's Ceyhan terminal loaded its first cargo from Iraq's Kurdish region since 2023, with flows expected to reach 240,000 bpd. The milestone marks operational normalization after September's resumption, though long-term sustainability remains uncertain given Baghdad-Erbil political dynamics. Iran sanctions expanded. Canada reimplemented UN Security Council sanctions October 1 following the JCPOA "snapback" mechanism activated by France, Germany, and the UK in late August. However, analysts suggest limited economic impact given extensive existing US sanctions and illicit trading activities. Russia continues pivoting to Asia, deepening LNG exports to China via Arctic LNG 2 and Sakhalin 2, while advancing the Power of Siberia 2 pipeline. Middle East investment remains robust. The region plans $130 billion in oil and gas supply for 2025, representing 15% of global investment, with Saudi Arabia leading at $40 billion. Clean energy attracts $10 billion, while Egypt expands renewables and constructs a Russian-financed nuclear plant. Israel's Leviathan field partners agreed to double gas exports to Egypt. Technically, WTI's $62 level is critical; break below targets $60 support amid oversupply fears. Brent tests $65.50 support, with $67 resistance on any demand recovery. Natural gas holds $3.40, with $3.70 Q4 target supported by LNG export growth. Thursday's modest rebound reflects technical buying near support rather than fundamental strength. This episode analyzes how energy executives should position for markets where EIA inventory reality contradicts API expectations, with OPEC+ output decisions and demand trajectory critical for Q4 direction amid record surplus projections.