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Market Close: March 30 Up

Fueling Strategy: Please fuel as needed today (prices are down 33 cents), tonight “partial fill ONLY” due to Thursday prices will drop another 6 to 7 cents, Friday prices will go back UP 9.5 cents  ~ Be Safe

NMEX Crude     $107.82 UP $3.5800
NYMEX ULSD    $3.8085 UP $0.0924
NYMEX Gas      $3.3250 UP $0.1217
NEWS

Oil futures ended higher on Wednesday, as skepticism emerged over progress made a day earlier in negotiations with Russia to bring an end to the war in Ukraine, renewing worries about crude supplies in region. Prices continued higher after U.S. government data showed a weekly decline in crude inventories, and a climb in stocks of gasoline and distillates.

Price action
  • West Texas Intermediate crude for May delivery rose $3.58, or 3.4%, to settle at $107.82 a barrel on the New York Mercantile Exchange after posting a loss of 1.6% on Tuesday.
  • May Brent crude, the global benchmark, rose $3.22, or 2.9%, to $113.45 a barrel on ICE Futures Europe, following a 2% loss a day earlier.
  • May natural gas rose 5.2% to $5.605 per million British thermal units.
  • April gasoline rose 3.8% to $3.325 a gallon and April heating oil climbed 2.5% to $3.809 a gallon.
Market drivers

Oil prices clawed back Tuesday’s losses and then some. Tuesday’s decline came as hopes over signs of progress between Russian and Ukraine negotiators drove investors out of the commodity. Russia’s Deputy Defense Minister Alexander Fomin reportedly said his country would decrease military activity in the direction of Kyiv and Chernihiv.

But Kremlin spokesman Dmitry Peskov was reported as saying . Wednesday that Russia hadn’t noticed anything “really promising” in those Ukraine proposals on Tuesday. Ukrainian President Volodymyr Zelensky and U.S. officials also cast doubt on whether any pledge to pull Russian troops back amounted to a shift. Pentagon spokesman John Kirby said the U.S. had detected a small number of Russian ground forces backing away from Kyiv, but it looked like forces were just being repositioned.

“Whether peace talks are real or not, the truth is that we have a global market that is under supplied regardless,” said Phil Flynn, senior market analyst at The Price Futures Group, in a daily report. Oil prices put the war premium in and they can take it out, but “after the smoke clears…we’re back to being under supplied.

Meanwhile, the slide in crude this week, which has at times surpassed 10%, “has made it even less likely that OPEC+ will decide at its meeting tomorrow to step up its production to a greater extent,” said Carsten Fritsch, analyst at Commerzbank, in a note to clients. In a July meeting last year, OPEC+ said that starting May 1, 2022, baeline output for the group would see a modest increase for some members, but the group as whole has been unable to meet their full production quotas. Troy Vincent, senior market analyst at DTN, told MarketWatch that he does not expect the revised baselines to change the course of the current monthly increases. “While this baseline change may slightly impact individual member’s share of the rising output going forward, it shouldn’t impact the total volume,” he said.

Elsewhere, Poland announced a plan to wean itself off Russian oil imports by the end of 2022, while Germany triggered an early warning over natural gas supplies, calling on consumers to conserve energy amid Russia’s demand that it pay for the commodity in rubles.

Supply data

The Energy Information Administration reported on Wednesday that U.S. crude inventories declined by 3.4 million barrels for the week ended March 25, down a second straight week. On average, the EIA was expected to show crude inventories down by 1.7 million barrels, according to analysts surveyed by S&P Global Commodity Insights. The American Petroleum Institude on Tuesday reported a 3 million-barrel decrease, according to sources. The EIA also reported weekly inventory increases of 800,000 barrels for gasoline and 1.4 million barrels for distillates. The analyst survey showed expectations for weekly supply declines of 1.9 million barrels for gasoline and 1.5 million barrels for distillates.

Both gasoline and distillate supplies rose as “implied demand has dropped for both,” especially for distillates, said Matt Smith, lead oil analyst, Americas, at Kpler. Crude stocks at the Cushing, Okla., Nymex delivery hub edged down by 1 million barrels for the week, while stocks in the Strategic Petroleum Reserve fell by 3 million barrels, EIA data showed.

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