by smiley » Wed 04 May 2005, 19:45:28
$this->bbcode_second_pass_quote('', 'T')he oil traders and others are looking at these inventory figures every week as a gauge of whether or not the supply/demand balance is correct. For about the last 4 weeks, inventory has gone up, refinery usage has stayed the same, so we can deduce from that, despite the gloom and doom, there is sufficient supply at the moment, given the level of consumption we are experiencing.
It is basically correct, but you have to correct for the seasonal variations in demand.
This is the building season where they have to replenish the heating fuel stocks from last winter and they have to build up gasoline stocks for the next driving season (June through august).
Therefore the stocks have to go up in this period. So it is not just absolute levels, but also a matter of how fast they are building. You have to compare the stocks to last year, not to last week, which is a mistake a lot of people make.
If you take this week as an example. The total stocks increased by a good 5 million barrels. However last year the same week the stocks went up by 7 million barrels. That is the reason why prices aren't dropping on the report. The stocks are growing, but they are not growing fast enough, which could spell problems later in the season when demand picks up.
We have seen a drop in the last week, but that was mainly due to the GDP report. As it turns out a slowdown in the US as well as the world economy is expected. This means that the demand for oil will decrease, or at least not grow as fast. That is why the oil prices fell, not the oil market report because it was fairly neutral.