Oil down, heads for 6th weekly loss on gasoline glut

CRUDE oil dipped on Friday, plumbing multi-month lows and heading for a sixth straight week of losses, as the approaching end of the US summer driving season suggested a growing surplus in gasoline supply.

Oilfield services firm Baker Hughes’ report that the US oil rig count rose by six this week added to the bearish sentiment for crude as it signaled production could creep up from higher drilling activity. Drillers have added a total of 32 oil rigs over the past three weeks.

Traders and investors await Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC) data at 3.30pm EDT to determine if money managers again had slashed their bullish exposure to US crude in the week to 4 August. Hedge funds’ net longs in US crude fell to near five-year lows in the two previous weeks.

Government data showing US gasoline stocks exceeded market estimates by about 300 000 barrels last week has pushed global oil benchmark Brent to six-month lows and US crude to a 4½-month trough since Wednesday.

Brent LCOc1 settled down 91 cents, or 1,8 percent, at $48,61 a barrel on Friday, after touching a more than six-month low of $48,45.

US crude CLc1 closed down 79 cents, or 1,8 percent, at $43,87, after hitting a more than four-month session low of $43,80.

Brent was down 7 percent for the week. It fell 23 percent over the past six weeks.

US crude also slid 7 percent on the week and lost 26 percent in the last six weeks.

Analysts said crude futures could be pressured in coming months by seasonal refinery maintenance and stock builds in key oil products such as distillates, which include diesel.

Gasoline RBc1 hit a five-and-a-half-month low on Friday. It tumbled 12 percent on the week, its sharpest weekly loss in almost six years. Ultra-low-sulfur diesel HOc1 fell nearly 3 percent on the week after hitting a six-year bottom on Wednesday.

“The summer driving season is fading and we could see a quick ramp-up in gasoline stocks,” said Chris Jarvis, analyst at Caprock Risk Management in Frederick, Maryland.

“We’ve had record refining heading out of the driving season that should translate into higher stocks of refined products in fall and winter.” — Reuters

 

 

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