原油周报:风险偏好回落,供需压力逐渐兑现-20250923
Yin He Qi Huo·2025-09-23 05:10
- Report Industry Investment Rating No information provided in the content. 2. Core Viewpoints of the Report - Last week, oil prices initially strengthened due to market pricing of the Fed's interest - rate cut and geopolitical tensions, but then sharply corrected as the rate cut met expectations, the dollar index rebounded, and there were no more geopolitical positives. Brent's main contract fluctuated between $65 - 67 per barrel. The oil price is expected to maintain a weak and volatile pattern. Upside risks come from geopolitical risk escalation, and downside risks come from increased recession expectations [4]. - Unilateral trading: Expect a weak and volatile trend. Arbitrage: Domestic gasoline and diesel cracks are weak. Options: Hold a wait - and - see attitude [5]. 3. Summary According to the Directory 3.1 Chapter 1: Comprehensive Analysis and Trading Strategies 3.1.1 Comprehensive Analysis - At the beginning of last week, influenced by the expected Fed rate cut and geopolitical tensions, oil prices were strong. After the Fed cut rates by 25BP, the dollar index rebounded, and oil prices corrected significantly. By the weekend, Brent's main contract fell to around $66 per barrel [4]. - In terms of supply and demand, OPEC increased production in August and September. The end of the peak demand season in the Middle East, the weakening of the Dubai spread, and the high volume of crude oil shipments all indicate rising supply pressure. Crude oil satellite inventories increased in late September, and there may be an inventory build - up in Q3 and Q4. In the short term, overseas refined oil demand is stable, and refinery profits support crude oil procurement demand. There is still room for the overseas diesel crack spread to ferment at the end of the year [4]. 3.1.2 Trading Strategies - Unilateral trading: Weak and volatile [5]. - Arbitrage: Domestic gasoline and diesel cracks are weak [5]. - Options: Wait - and - see [5]. 3.2 Chapter 2: Core Logic Analysis 3.2.1 Macro - The Fed cut rates by 25BP, which did not exceed market expectations. Macro risk appetite cooled. The yields of short - and long - term US Treasuries rebounded, and the dollar index rebounded from 96.6 to around 97.6 [8][9]. - The Fed's dot - plot median shows that it expects to cut rates two more times this year, one more time than the June expectation [11]. 3.2.2 Supply - Russian oil exports decreased by 934,000 barrels per day in the week ending September 14, the largest decline since July last year. Ukrainian drone attacks on Russian ports and energy facilities affected oil exports [15]. - In the week of September 19, the number of active US oil rigs increased by 2 to 418. In the week of September 12, US crude oil production decreased by 13,000 barrels per day to 13.482 million barrels per day [18]. 3.2.3 Inventory - In 2024, the global crude oil inventory decreased by 71.09 million barrels year - on - year. In Q1, the full - scale inventory increased by 890,000 barrels per day, and in Q2, the global satellite inventory increased by 1.05 million barrels per day. As of September 17 in Q3, the satellite inventory showed an increase of 4,400 barrels per day [22]. 3.2.4 Balance - The IEA slightly raised the global oil demand growth forecast for 2025 to 740,000 barrels per day. It is expected that global oil supply will increase by 2.3 million barrels per day in 2025 and 2.1 million barrels per day in 2026. The balance sheet still points to a significant surplus in the long - term [25]. 3.2.5 Spot Market - The Middle East market weakened, with the Dubai swap first - to - third - line spread falling from over $3 per barrel to around $2.6 per barrel. The North Sea market stabilized, with DFL rebounding from less than $0.5 per barrel to around $0.65 per barrel, and EFS rebounding to around $0.45 per barrel [27][29]. 3.3 Chapter 3: Weekly Data Tracking - Crude Oil Price and Spread: Data on the prices and spreads of Brent, WTI, and Dubai are presented [33]. - Crude Oil Spot: Data on the spot prices and spreads of European, West African, Middle Eastern, Mediterranean, and North American crude oils are provided [36][40][45]. - US Weekly Crude Oil Supply and Demand: Data on US crude oil production, feedstock volume, imports, and exports are presented [48]. - EIA Weekly Data: Data on US refinery operations, gasoline, distillates, jet fuel production, inventory, and net imports are provided [51][55][58][61]. - US Weekly Crude Oil Inventory: Data on US commercial crude oil inventory, Cushing inventory, and strategic inventory are presented [64][66]. - Crude Oil Floating Storage: Data on global, Asian, European, and West African crude oil floating storage are provided [69][70][71][73]. - European Refined Oil Inventory: Data on ARA gasoline, diesel, jet fuel, naphtha, and fuel oil inventories are presented [80][82][84]. - Singapore and Middle East Refined Oil Inventory: Data on Fujeirah and Singapore's heavy, medium, and light refined oil inventories are presented [86]. - Tanker Freight: Data on the freight rates of heavy - oil tankers on different routes are presented [89]. - Cracking and Profits: In Northwest Europe, diesel cracking strengthened, and gasoline cracking strengthened slowly. In the Asia - Pacific region, diesel cracking remained high, gasoline cracking strengthened, and naphtha cracking was strong. In North America, diesel cracking strengthened. In China, domestic refined - oil crack spreads weakened overall but rebounded near the weekend, and the export profits of gasoline and diesel continued to rise [93][100][107][118]. - Oil Price vs. Position: Data on the relationship between Brent, WTI, gasoil, RBOB, and HO prices and their managed - money net positions are presented [119][122][125].