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Energy stocks opened lower this morning, tracking mildly weaker broader index futures and lower oil prices. News flow continues to thin out as earnings have passed and year-end nears. Market participants will continue to remain focused on macroeconomic data, rates and Fed commentary.
Oil prices edged lower on Thursday, extending losses from the previous session as signals of higher supply from the U.S. met concern over lackluster energy demand from China. Near-term prices remain in contango, suggesting that investors expect prices to increase. "Clearly, the decline in crude oil prices and the weakening of the structure is an ominous sign; one that implies an oversupplied physical market," said Tamas Varga of oil broker PVM.
Natural gas futures are higher by a nickel. Cooler forecasts for the coming two weeks is aiding futures. EIA storage data will cover the past two weeks, with consensus expecting a combined build of 38 bcf.
Oil futures fall as EIA says crude inventories in the two weeks to Nov. 10 rose by 17.5 million barrels, to 439.4 million barrels.
EIA says crude stocks were up by 3.6 million barrels last week, adding to a 13.9 million build the previous week which it hadn't reported because of a system upgrade.
Crude stocks were 2% below their 5-year average. Gasoline stockpiles fell by 1.5 million barrels and distillate stocks were down by 1.4 million. Refineries processed 15.4 million barrels of crude daily, operating at 86.1% of capacity amid slumping refining margins.
The Cushing Hub held 25 million barrels of oil as of November 10, up from the 23.1 million recorded on October 27. Cushing’s total at the end of September was 22.1 million barrels.
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