LONDON (Reuters) - Hedge fund managers have exited from all the bullish
positions in crude oil and fuels they accumulated in the second half of
2017 as the bull market has unwound.
Upside price potential from Iran sanctions and prospective production
cuts by OPEC is matched by downside risks from rapidly rising U.S.
shale production and a deteriorating economic outlook.
Hedge
funds and other money managers cut their combined net long position in
the six most important petroleum futures and options contracts by a
further 74 million barrels in the week to Nov. 13.
Portfolio
managers have sold the equivalent of 553 million barrels of crude and
fuels in the last seven weeks, the largest reduction over a comparable
period since at least 2013.
Funds now hold a net long position of
just 547 million barrels, less than half the recent peak of 1.1 billion
at the end of September, and down from a record 1.484 billion in
January.
Net length has been reduced to the lowest level since July 2017 essentially unwinding the petroleum bull market of 2017/18 (tmsnrt.rs/2QPSxmw).
Bullishness
towards oil prices has evaporated and hedge funds now have the fewest
outright long positions in crude and fuels since January 2016, when oil
prices were hitting the bottom of the last slump.
By contrast,
short positions have climbed to 261 million barrels, the highest for a
year, and up from a recent low of just 96 million barrels at the end of
September.
In
the last five weeks, funds have sold 47 million barrels of U.S.
gasoline, 31 million barrels of U.S. heating oil and 29 million barrels
of European gasoil.
But the heaviest selling has been in crude,
where fund managers have sold 282 million barrels of Brent in the last
seven weeks and 221 million barrels of WTI in the last 10 weeks.
Fund
managers still have a residual net long position of 380 million barrels
in Brent and WTI, according to an analysis of exchange and regulatory
data.
But most of the remaining positions appear to be long-term,
passive and structural in nature rather than expressing an active view
on prices.
SQUARING UP
The money manager category of
positions reported by exchanges and regulators includes passive index
funds and pension funds as well as more actively managed hedge funds.
Pension
funds and index funds play little role in the short-term price
formation process in contrast to the much more active strategies pursued
by hedge fund managers.
Because of the way the data is
published, there is no way to identify how many of these positions were
active positions held by hedge funds and how many were more passive
long-term positions held by a range of players.
But
it may be possible to make a rough division between active/dynamic
positions and more structural/permanent positions by a careful
inspection of the data.
There appears to be a structural net long
position in crude oil futures and options of around 385 million barrels
in the crude oil market (“Hedge funds’ active positioning in crude
oil”, Reuters, July 2017).
Fund managers have never held long
positions amounting to less than 450 million barrels in Brent and WTI
since 2013, or short positions amounting to less than 65 million
barrels.
By subtracting structural positions from current
positions, it is possible to estimate the remaining active positions
held by hedge fund managers.
Following the recent wave of
liquidation, fund managers have reduced their actual net long position
down almost exactly in line with this long-term structural position.
Hedge funds’ active positions in crude are close to zero for the first time since July 2017 and before that August 2016 (tmsnrt.rs/2QWcBDG).
Fund managers now have an essentially neutral position on the outlook for oil prices for the first time in more than a year.
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