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Oil Inventories Inch Higher, Gasoline, Distillate Inventories Surge Again

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The Energy Information Administration (EIA) released its weekly report today on the status of petroleum inventories in the United States. Here are some highlights:

CRUDE OIL INVENTORIES:
Crude oil inventories increased by 1.3 million barrels (MMbbl) to a total of 432.4 MMbbl. At 432.4 MMbbl, inventories are 7.2 MMbbl below last year (1.6%) and are 2% below the five-year average for this time of year. Inventories in Cushing, OK, the NYMEX delivery point, fell 0.5 million barrels to a total of 34.2 million barrels. The Strategic Petroleum Reserve (SPR) rose 600,000 barrels from the prior week and stands at 355.0 million barrels, 4.5% below the year-ago level.

Domestic crude oil production was unchanged at 13.2 million barrels per day, 1,000,000 bpd higher than the year-ago period. Alaska oil production fell 42,000 bpd to 393,000 bpd, while production in the Lower 48 was unchanged at 12.8 million barrels per day.

GASOLINE INVENTORIES:
Gasoline inventories increased by 8.0 million barrels (MMbbl) to a total of 245.0 MMbbl. At 245.0 MMbbl, inventories are up 18.2 MMbbl, or 8.0% higher than a year ago, and are 1% above the five-year average for this time of year.

Here’s how individual regions and their gasoline inventory fared:
East Coast (+2.5 MMbbl)
Midwest (+2.2 MMbbl)
Gulf Coast (+2.6 MMbbl)
Rockies (+0.2 MMbbl)
West Coast (+0.6 MMbbl)

It’s important to note which regions saw increases/decreases as this information likely drives prices up (in the case of falling inventories) or down (in the case of rising inventories).

DISTILLATE (DIESEL, HEATING OIL) INVENTORIES:
Distillate inventories increased by 6.5 million barrels to a total of 132.4 MMbbl. At 132.4 MMbbl, inventories are up 14.7 MMbbl, or 12.5% higher than a year ago. Distillate inventories stand about 4% below the five-year average for this time of year.

IMPLIED GASOLINE DEMAND:
Gasoline supplied to the market amounted to 8.33 million barrels per day (MMbpd), or 371,000bpd higher than the previous week. So far in 2024, implied gasoline demand (“products supplied”) is 10.2% higher versus 2023, per the EIA.

REFINERY OUTPUT/UTILIZATION:
Refinery utilization decreased by 0.6 percentage points versus last week’s numbers to reach 92.9%. Gasoline production increased to 9.7 million barrels per day while distillate fuel production decreased to 5.2 million barrels per day last week.

Utilization rates for the last week were as follows:
East Coast: 88.2% (-4.2%)
Midwest: 95.2% (+0.1%)
Gulf Coast: 94.5% (+0.0%)
Rocky Mountains: 88.1% (-1.6%)
West Coast: 85.9% (-2.5%)

These percentages show how much of a region’s overall capacity was used to refine oil. It’s important to note these percentages because the lower the utilization percentage, the lower the output, which has a direct impact on local gasoline prices. If refiners in your region have lower or falling utilization rates, you’re more likely to see gas prices rise.

OVERALL SUPPLY:
Total oil stocks in the United States (excluding the SPR) are up by 33.0 MMbbl (2.7%) versus a year ago and stand at 1.261 billion barrels (excluding the Strategic Petroleum Reserve). Including the SPR, total stocks are up 16.4 million barrels (+1.0%) versus a year ago.

IMPORTS/EXPORTS:
The U.S. imported 6.24 MMbpd of crude oil per day last week, down 654,000 bpd versus the previous week, while crude oil exports fell by 1,970,000 bpd to 3.32 MMbpd. Total motor gasoline imports last week averaged 500,000 bpd. The U.S. also imported 274,000 bpd of distillate fuels. However, during the same timeframe, the U.S. exported 823,000 bpd of finished gasoline and 1,076,000 bpd of distillates. In total, U.S. companies exported 9.56 MMbpd of oil and petroleum products.

Before the report was released, the price of West Texas Intermediate crude oil was up $1.15 to $73.39 per barrel. Just after the report was released, oil was up 54 cents per barrel.

Head of Petroleum Analysis (USA)

Patrick has developed into the leading source for reliable and accurate information on gas price hikes. Patrick has been interviewed as a gasoline price expert hundreds of times since 2004. Based in Chicago, Patrick brings to GasBuddy all his assets to help consumers by giving reliable and accurate price forecasts, including the San Jose Mercury News dubbing Patrick "one of the nation's most accurate forecasters" in 2012.