Major oil draw and a Saudi Arabian coup? The Energy Information Administration (EIA) reported another major 4.727-million-barrel drawdown in crude supply even as US shale production rebounded last week causing US oil production to rise to 9.43 million barrels per day, up from 9.4 million barrels which puts it at a two-year high. We know that EU’s oil inventories are draining at a record rate, but it is not the only place where we see evidence of global rebalancing which helped oil close at a 6- week high.

In Saudi Arabia, a report showed that Saudi domestic oil stocks fell to just 259 million barrels at the end of May 2017, which was the lowest level since January 2012, according to updated figures published on Tuesday from Reuters. That would mark Saudi crude stocks declining 16 out of the last 19 months and a sure sign of global market rebalancing. Saudi crude exports to the US also declined, hitting the lowest level since 2015. If the Saudi’s follow through on their threat to cut their exports by another 1 million barrels, it would cause US oil inventors to plummet even father.

Shale oil production, as impressive as it is, would be no match for that magnitude of a cut and we would see the inventory glut disappear rather quickly. Shale producers, according to Reuters, have increased by almost 12 percent since mid-2016 to 9.4 million barrels per day (bpd) which has not been enough to stop the US crude and Saudi crude inventory drain game that is going to accelerate even as we are nearing so called seasonal peak demand for oil. And while we may see a pullback due do the seasonal drop in demand, a new commitment from OPEC against improving global demand should cause a price rise.

For shale producers, a price spike is desperately need because a lot of shale oil producers may be unhedged after the end of the year. Reuters reported that while most, though not all, shale producers have hedged the price of their output for the remainder of 2017, which gives them some protection in the short-term against the downturn. But very little production has been hedged so far for 2018. The current calendar strip means hedging is only possible for 2018 at a WTI price of around $47 – and many shale producers can’t make money at that level. 

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