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Import Risk: Medium
Outlook: Neutral
WTI gained $0.15 (+0.2%) to $61.25 on surprise inventory tightness driven by import collapse. Crude arrivals hit 5.1M bpd—lowest in 4 years—overwhelming weak refinery demand to produce 6.9 mmbls draw. Critical question: timing anomaly or structural shift?
The Import Question
Dramatic decline: Imports plunged 867k bpd week-over-week to 4-year low. Combined with exports rising 158k bpd to 4.36M bpd, net imports fell to just 690k bpd—lowest since September. This drove inventories to 416.0 mmbls despite production at 13.64M bpd and falling refinery runs.
Next week tells the story: Import rebound would confirm timing quirk (vessel delays, scheduling). Sustained weakness suggests structural change in U.S. crude sourcing patterns. Wednesday's EIA report is make-or-break for this narrative.
Production Defying Forecasts
Domestic output continues surprising upside. 4-week average 13.64M bpd (+1.2% YoY) despite rig count declines. August monthly data showed 13.79M bpd—114k bpd above DOE forecast. Efficiency gains (longer laterals, better completions) = structural supply shift.
Inventory Picture
National: 416.0 mmbls (-5.9% vs 5-yr avg, largest deficit since August)
Cushing OK: 22.6 mmbls (+1.3 mmbls weekly, easing tightness)
Refinery runs: 15.22M bpd (-1.7% YoY on maintenance)
Trading Implication
Wednesday's import data drives direction. Rebound = bearish (removes tightness story), continued weakness = bullish (validates draws). Expect 1-2 mmbls draw for Oct 31 week. Range: $59-64 likely until import picture clarifies.
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