Today the EIA data release showed 1.3 million barrel build vs 4 million barrel expected build, hence the crude rally today. Now normally crude inventories peak in may, decline through September, then build again through December. So we are approaching a seasonal peak right now (see chart below).
This is the third bullish indication we have had in the US in the past week.
1) US Oil Rig count decline of 40 last friday (from baker hughs) represents another downward acceleration after two weeks of very small declines of 10 and 11.
2) Drilling productivity report from EIA earlier this week predicts declines in production in Bakken and Eagleford starting last month.
3) Inventory build rate slowed this week, according to today's EIA release, possibly suggesting a peak.

EIA data is now predicting production declines for this month and the incredible inventory build rate may finally be slowing, and inventories may even be peaking. We remain a large importer of crude and the timing of those imports, as well as the timing of refinery maintenance has a large effect on inventories, so it will take several weeks to see if we are truly done with the build. We may indeed be at a turning point both in that production is peaking and that our historic inventory build this winter is running out of steam, but this is not a certainty.
We also need to keep the Iran situation in the back of our mind. I don't know how to handicap a deal and the end of US sanctions. But I think that the highly effective sanctions that have been in place since 2010 are coming to an end, one way or another. The Russians have announced a deal to trade crude for missiles. This is one of the ways that Iran can skirt sanctions. The US banking restrictions are a hugely effective tool, and crude exporters must go to great lengths such as buying oil with physical gold, as Turkish traders are almost certainly doing. If Russia set out to skirt the sanctions using barter: trading grain or weapons for oil, they could probably soak up all the Iranian exports then re-export at a profit. Even if congress kills a deal with Iran, it is hard to see how the sanctions regime can hold up now. Because of the actions of Netenyahu and Congressional Republicans, it will appear to the rest of the world that we were not negotiating in good faith. We need Russian and Chinese cooperation for the sanctions to be effective and it is hard to see how that happens going forward if a deal is not reached. The bottom line is that I expect Iranian crude is likely to come onto the market this summer one way or another.
This is the third bullish indication we have had in the US in the past week.
1) US Oil Rig count decline of 40 last friday (from baker hughs) represents another downward acceleration after two weeks of very small declines of 10 and 11.
2) Drilling productivity report from EIA earlier this week predicts declines in production in Bakken and Eagleford starting last month.
3) Inventory build rate slowed this week, according to today's EIA release, possibly suggesting a peak.

EIA data is now predicting production declines for this month and the incredible inventory build rate may finally be slowing, and inventories may even be peaking. We remain a large importer of crude and the timing of those imports, as well as the timing of refinery maintenance has a large effect on inventories, so it will take several weeks to see if we are truly done with the build. We may indeed be at a turning point both in that production is peaking and that our historic inventory build this winter is running out of steam, but this is not a certainty.
We also need to keep the Iran situation in the back of our mind. I don't know how to handicap a deal and the end of US sanctions. But I think that the highly effective sanctions that have been in place since 2010 are coming to an end, one way or another. The Russians have announced a deal to trade crude for missiles. This is one of the ways that Iran can skirt sanctions. The US banking restrictions are a hugely effective tool, and crude exporters must go to great lengths such as buying oil with physical gold, as Turkish traders are almost certainly doing. If Russia set out to skirt the sanctions using barter: trading grain or weapons for oil, they could probably soak up all the Iranian exports then re-export at a profit. Even if congress kills a deal with Iran, it is hard to see how the sanctions regime can hold up now. Because of the actions of Netenyahu and Congressional Republicans, it will appear to the rest of the world that we were not negotiating in good faith. We need Russian and Chinese cooperation for the sanctions to be effective and it is hard to see how that happens going forward if a deal is not reached. The bottom line is that I expect Iranian crude is likely to come onto the market this summer one way or another.