Slow And Steady Wins The Race

Good morning!

Happy Friday! Not much has changed in the crude oil markets since last week. Crude oil prices continue their slow and steady climb higher. WTI looks to close above $75/barrel this week. I believe $80/barrel on WTI is a better bet than price falling back below $70/barrel. There is so much synergy between all crude oil harvesting companies around the globe. Demand for crude oil will only increase as inflation eases and banks get comfortable with de-risking. Most large banks are merging/purchasing smaller banks and the portfolio of potential losses from office space rentals seems to be much less of a concern than previously reported. In cities where office space is dwindling and risky, other cities are experiencing massive growth. So the office space crises supposedly will be localized to certain markets, not a national crisis

In local retail news, I wrote last week that the Chicago spot market was very long on diesel and could go up possibly 50 cents/gallon at any point in the coming weeks. Well, the night I wrote my last blog post, diesel cost rose 50 cents/gallon in our market. The cost of gasoline and diesel continued to rise this week. I expect to see retail prices of diesel and gasoline at the pump move higher next week.

Although propane fundamentals remain weak, crude oil prices are starting to offer support from the floor that landed a couple weeks ago. However, propane prices did still drop overall in the month of July and we might see just a small decrease in propane retail prices/contracts in August. However, the price change, if it happens, would be minimal and we still have a week left in July.

As always, if you have any questions, comments, or concerns, please feel free to give us a call.

Best regards,

Jon Crawford

Crude Oil Prices On A Stair Climber

Good morning!

Happy Friday! Crude oil prices continue to climb higher even though recession fears in the US and China linger in the background. I believe that traders are buying into the idea that oil producers in OPEC+, including the US, are being very disciplined with their harvesting and capital expenses. Everyone would rather sell less oil and make more money than gain market share from a competitor. As all oil companies look to diversify their businesses, the action of “flooding the market” seems to be off the table. WTI crude oil prices broke through $75/barrel this week. As I have been writing, I do not see a scenario where WTI prices hold under $70/barrel. American producers will cut production to keep prices higher if WTI starts to drop dramatically. The war in Ukraine is continuing to put pressure on Russian crude oil sales, but as long as China and India continue to purchase Russian crude, we shouldn’t experience any major spike in price. We will probably continue to see WTI price ebb and flow between $70-80/barrel. In addition, Saudi Arabia announced further cuts on shipments to the US East Coast. The move will put pressure on the Gulf Coast and Chicago markets to move barrels east. The scenario will eventually cause a spike in refined products in Chicago and the Gulf Coast due to higher demand for diesel during harvest and supplying the East Coast. Although recession fears continue to dominate the news, I would not relax and bet on crude oil prices dropping through the floor.

In local news, refined diesel prices out of the Chicago market are hitting the lowest cost of the year. But the devil is in the details. Chicago diesel is trading over 30 cents/gal under the Group and East Coast markets. Chicago has the ability to move barrels to the East Coast markets. I believe there is a “head fake” going on. In other words, what’s going on in Chicago will probably be short lived and diesel prices will jump much higher at some point in the near future. The futures on diesel out of Chicago are much higher and off the lows of back in January. Gasoline prices continue to remain in a narrow range and I don’t expect to see pump prices on gasoline drop much in the near term. Diesel retail prices might drop, but most retailers will use caution because the cost could jump much higher on any given day.

Propane prices continue to climb higher. We are at the lowest retail price of the year, but if crude prices continue to climb higher propane prices will follow. We highly recommend all customers top off their tank right now and contract for the upcoming heating season. Remember that you have until the end of August to lock in your price.

As always, if you have any questions, comments, or concerns, please feel free to give us a call.

Best regards,

Jon Crawford

Our Friend Volatility Will Return At Some Point

Good morning and happy Friday!

WTI crude oil prices continue to trade in the narrow range of around $69/barrel and $71/barrel. The continued hot US economy is pushing treasury yields higher. And Saudi Arabia announced their cuts in production will continue indefinitely to keep WTI price above $70/barrel. Saudi’s are cutting shipments to the US as well which puts pressure on crude oil producers to move barrels east. Quite honestly, the crude oil trade is fairly boring these days. Although, we did have a longer holiday weekend with low volume trading on the market. The US is trying to make peace with China, but India is stepping up to the plate to fill the gap of cheaper labor and production in the world economy. There is definitely a shift in the world economic order taking place, but the resolve will still take a long time to play out. Oh, and there is still the war in Ukraine that is not showing any signs of slowing down. The US has a presidential election coming up. I believe that the next election will be one of the hottest elections in years. We are dealing with the most issues at home and abroad that I have ever witnessed in my lifetime. The following year will be wild and intense. I’m not quite sure how everything will play out in the marketplace, but I do know that our old friend “volatility” will return at some point.

In local news, the cost of gasoline continued a slow burn trend higher. Gasoline retail prices will continue to move in a very narrow range, but possibly higher in the coming week or so. I do not see gasoline retail prices jumping above $3.50/gal unless prices start to move in the crude oil market. Diesel prices continue to fall as our Chicago market seems to be longer on diesel inventory than expected. And just like gasoline, I expect to see diesel retail prices stay below $3.50/gal for the coming week or so.

Propane spot prices unexpectedly fell some more over the past weeks, but out months continue to stay higher. Our summer fill prices dropped a bit but nothing drastic enough to cause FOMO for those who purchased earlier. Our contract prices for next year are out and I highly recommend everyone to contract because the value of propane price percentage compared to crude oil price is extremely attractive. The best strategy is to top your tank off by the end of August, and then contract for your remaining winter gallons.

As always, if you have any questions, comments, or concerns, please feel free to give us a call.

Best regards,

Jon Crawford

Happy 4th of July Weekend!

Happy 4th of July weekend!

I want to wish everyone safe and happy travels this weekend! I hope the weekend is fun and full of laughter! I will keep the update fairly short and straight forward. And that’s easy because not much happened this week! 🙂 Crude oil price traded in a very narrow range all week. There was a little news here and there that would try and move prices: possible civil war in Russia, Saudi Arabia cutting oil shipments to the US, and the US Crude Oil Inventories reporting a huge draw on Wednesday. I guess traders are still in a “wait and see” pattern. The week leading up to a holiday and the week after can be a bit wonky as many traders take vacation and not much liquidity moves in the market. So we should probably see some more action in the coming weeks.

Gasoline cost ended the week only five cents higher than Monday. And diesel cost ended the week about five cents lower. Therefore, I would not expect to see much change in retail prices at the pump going into the travel weekend. This is good news to all the drivers out there. The usual “run up” on gasoline price going into a big holiday weekend did not happen.

Propane prices traded so narrow it’s almost like they didn’t even trade. We are officially at a new low price as competition for summer fills heated up (no pun intended). We highly recommend everyone to fill their tanks now and contract for the next heating season.

As always, if you have any questions, comments, or concerns, please feel free to give us a call.

Best regards,

Jon Crawford

Same Old, Same Old

Good evening!

I hope this message finds everyone well. I wanted to first announce that there will be no updates for at least the next two weeks as I travel with family. But I’ll get back into the swing of things when I return!

WTI crude oil traded this week again in the same narrow range of just below $70/barrel and just above $70/barrel. OPEC+ had their meeting last weekend and decided to keep current cuts in place. However, Saudi Arabia voluntarily announced another 1M barrels/day cut in oil production. The additional cut puts Saudi Arabia’s production at the lowest level in over 20 years. The news pushed the oil markets higher to start the week. But as the week dragged on, recession fears and too much refined products in America started to move crude prices lower. Even though crude prices eased a bit based on recession fears, refiners are being very vigilant to keep refined prices high. Producers and refiners are very comfortable selling less product for more money. The mentality of “less for more” is new since Covid and doesn’t seem to be going away. And as margins increase from production to refining, the cost is passed along all the way to the end consumer. And as the cost other goods and services remain inflated, I expect to see healthy margins on gasoline and diesel at the pump as well.

In local news, farming is in full swing, even though most of the Midwest is in drought. Supply tightness coming out of Chicago is keeping a floor on both gasoline and diesel prices, and even pushing them higher. I expect prices for gasoline and diesel to remain inflated throughout farming season and throughout summer into harvest.

Propane prices continue to remain weaker in comparison to other commodities. We highly recommend everyone take a summer fill now and contract their next season’s heating gallons. Considering how weak propane is trading in percentage to crude, if crude oil breaks out higher in price, propane price will follow. Our contracts are slowly being mailed out, but feel free to call our office, order a summer fill, and lock in your price for next heating season!

As always, if you have any questions, comments, or concerns, please feel free to give us a call.

Best regards,

Jon Crawford

Crude Oil On A Swing Set

Good morning!

Happy Friday! I hope everyone is staying cool. There is not much to report this week. The possibility of not passing a bill to raise the debt ceiling coupled with some not so great economic data from China and the US sent WTI Crude prices below $70/barrel in the middle of the week. In addition, OPEC+ meets this weekend. Saudi Arabia is calling for possibly more cuts in production while Russia is looking to stay the course. Russia has taken some Saudi market share. However, Saudi Arabia is more interested in gaining cash for diversity investment from oil. Therefore, the calls for Saudi to “flood the market” and teach Russia a lesson I believe are wrong. Saudi Arabia has some of the lowest cash reserves on hand due to continued investment in US and other countries’ companies as well as their own infrastructure. The prediction that Saudi would risk in a demand environment as volatile as we have seen in years seems reckless. Their behavior over the past two years has been much more disciplined and I believe their actions will continue to reflect their on going concerns. WTI oil prices, again, dropped below $70/barrel for about one day on the combo of all the aforementioned news coupled with the EIA report showing builds in national inventory. But as soon as the debt ceiling bill passed the House, and then the Senate, WTI price popped right back above $70/barrel. So prices were on a swing set this week. WTI price started the week above $70/barrel, fell to about $67/barrel mid-week, and then look to end the week at the price right about were it started above $70/barrel. OPEC+ meets over the weekend, so the announced decision from the meeting will drive markets next week.

In local news, refined products followed the crude oil market for the most part. Gasoline prices continue to stay steady as refiners continue to take profit margins over market share based on jitters of lower summer gasoline demand. Diesel prices dropped a bit further due to recession fears. The main drivers of potential recession were the debt ceiling talks, OPEC+ meeting, and the FED raising rates further which would raise crude oil price. But if crude prices drive too high, the possibility of pushing the country into recession becomes stronger which in turn hurts diesel demand. There is a tightrope balancing act going on between oil harvesting and refiners.

Propane prompt prices fell a bit further. However, the out months have been staying fairly steady. I would highly recommend ordering a summer fill and locking in your price for next year. Our summer fill price is probably the lowest we will see and contracts are well under the $2/gallon price of last year. Please call the office to place your order and request a contract. We will be very liberal with summer fill arrangements to try and give everyone the opportunity to take advantage of the low price.

As always, if you have any questions, comments, or concerns, please feel free to give us a call.

Best regards,

Jon Crawford

Remembering Those Who Gave the Ultimate Sacrifice

Good morning,

I woke up this morning and felt it best to take a moment and honor all service persons who gave the ultimate sacrifice of their lives defending our incredibly awesome country. Even though our country can go through hard times at home, we are extremely fortunate and blessed to live in America. I wish everyone safe travels and enjoy remembering that our long weekend came at a significant cost.

Crude oil prices rose to start the week based on Saudi Arabia saying “look out” to short sellers of crude. The next OPEC+ meeting is during the first couple days in June. But then yesterday, Russia said that they are not planning on any more cuts and don’t see a scenario where OPEC+ would approve additional cuts. The announcement caused crude oil prices to collapse. OPEC allowed Russia to play a part in meetings back in 2008, so the difference in opinion could be causing some friction and fissures in OPEC. We will see what happens at the meeting. And then of course there is the US Debt Ceiling talks which is putting all traders on their heels. So for now, we are in a “wait and see” moment. I would not be placing any long-term hedging bets on crude oil at this time.

Gasoline and diesel prices in the Chicago market dropped a bit towards the end of the week. We might see a little relief on retail prices at the pump, but not too much. Although some refineries that were down for over a year have restarted, a very high volume refinery has struggled to get gasoline back online. However, I expect supplies to be healthy and ready to go for the summer season. But retail prices on gasoline will continue to be higher because of the crude oil crack spread incentives to produce diesel.

Propane is bouncing back and forth in a very narrow range. Summer fills are starting to pick up and next season’s heating contracts have been released. So look in the mail for contract information coming your way, or feel free to call our office and get yourself locked in for next year. The great news is that the coming season’s contract pricing is 30 cents/gallon cheaper than last year! 🙂

As always, if you have any questions, comments, or concerns, please feel free to give us a call.

Best regards,

Jon Crawford

The Debt Ceiling Final Countdown

Good afternoon,

Happy Friday! Not much happened this week in the world of crude oil trading. Most traders are either keeping their bets in place or not placing any bets. The price of WTI traded in a very narrow range of only a few dollars this week, but still holding above my predicted floor price of $70/barrel. Every time a piece of positive economic news was released, a negative counter was released, and vice a versa. I believe everyone is sitting on the sidelines waiting for Biden and McCarthy to strike a deal on the debt ceiling and digest the deal before there is movement in the marketplace. In all honesty, the crude oil trade was fairly quiet this week.

In local news, diesel prices continued their recent slide, but flattened out by the end of the week. Gasoline prices continued their upward movement, even as demand stays flat. Refiners are just not making a lot of gasoline. The arbitrage for diesel on the world market is too great and if economic downturn occurs this summer, no refiner wants to be stuck with a bunch of gasoline. So I expect gasoline retail prices to climb a bit or flatten out. And I think diesel retail will drop a touch and hold.

Propane prices, along with crude were fairly flat this week. I think the bottoming of prices for the summer is very soon or happening now. Next season’s heating contracts will be released on the coming Monday. We also suggest that everyone take advantage of our lower summer fill price. You can work with our staff on liberal gallonage requirements to receive some propane at these lower prices.

As always, if you have any questions, comments, or concerns, please feel free to give us a call.

Best regards,

Jon Crawford

Late sell-off, but still holding on!

Good afternoon!

I hope this message finds you all well. I am writing my weekly update a bit early. WTI crude prices were on a ride higher for four straight days based on the strong dollar and talks of no recession, as well as American oil companies announcing they plan to be disciplined just like OPEC to try keep WTI price above $70/barrel. Oil companies across the globe have made it pretty clear that $70/barrel WTI is the price floor. Although there was a slight sell-off and profit taking today, WTI will still not close below $70/barrel today. Inflation data was “devil in details” like usual, China’s economy slowed less than anticipated, the EIA reported large draws in gasoline and distillates, and the UK is confident they will avoid recession. But, the big news supporting crude oil prices is once again Pres Biden saying he is going to start purchasing crude oil to refill the Strategic Petroleum Reserve. The SPR is currently at the lowest level since 1983. Since making the statement public, support for crude oil prices will remain strong. The sell-off today was a bit of profit taking on the latest run higher and Jamie Dimon from Chase bank saying that the mid-bank failures might not be over yet. So you combine a bit of higher prices with some fear thrown in there and traders with try and bet on the arbitrage. I think we will experience WTI prices climbing back higher tomorrow into the weekend.

In local news, gasoline and diesel cost rose over 30 cents in the past four trading sessions before giving back a bit today. In our local market, we are now into farm season coupled with refinery maintenance. I think we have some supply issues working their way out between the Group and Chicago spot markets. For now, I expect to see diesel prices and gasoline prices remain higher than the low last Monday. Even if crude prices fall, we could experience higher prices in finished product due to refiners running into issues with their maintenance and looking to export barrels instead of keeping wet barrels in local markets. Only time will tell.

Propane has been looking very steady and making small prices moves with the WTI crude oil trade. The good news is that summer fill prices continue to drop. Now is a great time to fill your tank, and I think next week heating contracts for 2023-2024 season will be available! The contract price for next heating season will be much lower than the previous winter season. During a time of inflation, propane is experiencing deflationary pressure due to an abundance of inventory, even though exports are at record levels. In addition, we don’t see production slowing anytime soon. Keep your eyes peeled for the contract mailing or feel free to call us next week. Remember, filling your tank in the summer benefits the supplier by giving the supplier allocation access for the coming winter to guarantee that propane will be efficiently available in the marketplace. We are a bit more flexible with our summer fill volumes to try and help everyone take advantage of cheaper prices.

As always, if anyone has any questions, comments, or concerns, please feel free to give us a call.

Best regards,

Jon Crawford

And the fear returns… But is it real?

Good morning!

Well, the fear of recession, midsize bank failure contagion, and the FED raising interest rates a quarter point hammered crude prices this week.  Even though WTI crude price is finding support on Friday, WTI could report three straight weeks of loses.  I figured that traders would take profits on Friday and buy back in since WTI fell below $70/barrel which is the current “magic price floor”.  Midsize banks are continuing to lose deposits.  The interesting fact this week was that most of the midsize banks losing deposits have a great balance sheet and are not in any sort of financial trouble!  The main issue is that the news is constantly hammering midsize bank failure so their customers are pulling their money out and moving to the big banks, like Chase, Bank of America, Wells Fargo, etc.  Unlike 2008 when the big banks were in trouble for making risky bets, the midsize banks are the vulnerable banks without making many risky bets!  Yes, some midsize banks have bad balance sheets, but this week, healthy midsize banks got hammered due to customer fear and lose of deposits.  In addition, when the FED raised the interest rate another quarter point, the fear of recession only made the problem for midsize banks worse.  The news is constantly reporting that customers need to be in safer larger banks.  Unfortunately, the banking crisis unfolding before us is not as bad as the situation being sold.  The ECB (European Central Bank) also raised interest rates this weeks adding to the fear of global recession.  However, India and China reported healthy economic growth as well as a nice forecast for the year.  The war in Ukraine continues, England is a mess, and the US seems to be dead set on waiting for the FDIC to raise deposit protection to calm the midsize banking failure contagion.  Although recession fears won this week in the marketplace, traders of oil forget that OPEC+, as well as American producers, are being very disciplined with their production.  I would not be surprised if we start to see more significant draws of crude oil inventory in the US, as well as OPEC+ announcing even further cuts at their next meeting in the first part of June.  In fact, if WTI starts to fall towards $65/barrel sooner than later, I could see OPEC+ having and emergency meeting and cutting production before their.  An emergency meeting has been used in the past to stop the falling knife.  For now, I think we are in a falling knife scenario based mostly on fear.  Remember, markets are not the economy. Markets behave irrationally.  Once again, let’s see what next week brings!

In local news, gasoline continues to trade sideways as builds in inventory continue acorss the US, even with decreased production.  Diesel prices have collapsed well below my predicted floor.  I am shocked at how low diesel prices continue to move.  Although there is much profit taking in the market today, I believe we will see cheaper diesel prices until demand for farming and the calming of the almost “meme” banking crisis ends.

Propane prices coninue to fall and I believe we will see the lowest prices towards the end of May.  Production is strong and inventories will start to build quite dramatically over the coming months.  Next season’s heating contracts will be cheaper than this year.  And remember, if you can, please order a summer fill.  Not only will the price be lower than the nest season’s contract, but summer fills help propane companies build allocation rights for the coming winter which ensues reliable supply for the state of Wisconsin.

As always, if you have any questions, comments, or concerns, please feel free to give us a call.  Have a great weekend!

Best regards,

Jon Crawford