Goldman Sachs says global oil stockpiles falling at record pace


Visible inventories shrank by a record 8.7 million barrels a day so far in May, almost double the average pace since the conflict began, Goldman analysts said. — Bloomberg

NEW YORK: Global stockpiles of crude oil and products are being drawn down at a record pace this month as the war in the Middle East drags on, curtailing supplies, according to Goldman Sachs Group Inc.

Visible inventories shrank by a record 8.7 million barrels a day so far in May, almost double the average pace since the conflict began, analysts including Yulia Zhestkova Grigsby and Daan Struyven said in a May 20 note.

“Physical markets continue to tighten, as estimated oil exports through the strait remain at a very low 5% of normal,” they said, referring to the Hormuz waterway that’s subject to a double blockade by both Iran and the United States.

Global energy markets have been upended by the conflict, which has led to an unprecedented supply shock.

That’s spurred the rapid drawdown of holdings accumulated before the crisis, while governments have also coordinated releases from strategic reserves in a bid to rein in price gains.

International Energy Agency executive director Fatih Birol warned last week that commercial oil inventories were shrinking at an accelerated pace. The agency has also estimated that the market would remain “severely undersupplied” until October even if the conflict were to end soon.

About two-thirds of the draws in May were driven by a drop in so-called oil on water, with declines in exports outpacing a weaker imports, the Goldman analysts said.

The import slump was “spreading from Asia to Europe,” they said, noting jet-fuel imports into Europe were 60% below 2025 averages.

Still, although global stockpiles have drawn at a 4.6 million-barrel-a-day average pace since March, they are flat year-on-year given the buildup of a “sizeable buffer” in the nine months before the war, they said.

In China – the world’s largest crude importer – refineries were displaying “a lack of appetite” for crude, reflected in “large declines” in imports, they said.

Local fuel sales sank 22% last month, partly due to weaker economic activity, they added, citing estimates from the bank’s economists.

In the United States, nationwide crude inventories, including the Strategic Petroleum Reserve, plunged by a record 17.8 million barrels last week, according to official data, as record exports start to erode holdings.

Stockpiles at the Cushing, Oklahoma, hub continued to inch closer to so-called tank bottoms. — Bloomberg

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