Oil Squeeze Of 2023 Turns To Surplus In Warning For Market Bulls

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Oil Squeeze of 2023 Turns to Surplus in Warning for Market Bulls

The oil supply squeeze widely expected at the end of last year now looks like it may have been a surplus — a reminder for any remaining crude bulls to tread carefully.   

A year ago, crude traders and forecasters anticipated that the fourth quarter would be the strongest point of 2023, with China's post-pandemic demand recovery pushing prices up to $100 a barrel. More recently, the Organization of Petroleum Exporting Countries has been predicting a record deficit of 3 million barrels a day. 

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Yet instead of rallying, oil prices slumped almost 20% in the final three months of the year, and despite turmoil in the Middle East, currently remain below $80 a barrel. The latest oil-market balances published on Thursday help explain why.

The International Energy Agency in Paris — which a year ago projected a shortfall of 2 million barrels a day for the period — estimates that stockpiles actually swelled by 560,000 barrels a day as US production soared.

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The reversal should serve as a caution for traders still banking on a price recovery. 

OPEC, for example, continues to forecast that global oil markets will remain in a considerable deficit for the rest of this year and through 2025. The cartel's forecast for demand growth this year is almost double that of the IEA — though its ever-deeper production cuts could be seen as an insurance policy in case those numbers miss the mark.

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