Oil inventories headed toward multi-decade lows, US EIA warns

Kitco Media
By Reuters
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Reuters
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NEW YORK, June 9 (Reuters) - Oil stockpiles in the world's largest economies are headed toward the lowest levels since at least 2003 as inventories are drawn down at a record pace due to the lost output from the Iran war, the U.S. Energy Information Administration said ​on Tuesday.

Total oil inventories in the members of the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development ​will fall to just under 2.3 billion barrels by December, the EIA said, ⁠based on its current assumption that marine traffic through the Strait of Hormuz is unlikely to ​return to pre-conflict levels until early 2027. The OECD stockpile has not been this low since the EIA ​began keeping records in 2003, the agency said in its monthly Short-Term Energy Outlook report.

The rapid inventory drawdown, which is needed to make up for 11 million barrels a day of lost Middle Eastern output, creates the foundation for a ​sharp increase in oil prices in the months ahead, the agency said.

Recent reports that the U.S. and ​Iran were near a deal to re-open the Strait of Hormuz, a critical waterway that handles 20% of global ‌oil shipments, ⁠weighed on prices in recent weeks.

"As of this writing, the agreement has not been finalized. Most oil production in the region remains shut-in, and global oil inventories have continued to fall to meet demand," the EIA said.

Prices for global benchmark Brent crude oil are expected to average around $105 ​a barrel in June and ​July in the ⁠spot market, the EIA said, well above the $91.60 a barrel in the futures market on Tuesday.

"Because of the size of the drawdown in global inventories, we ​forecast that oil prices will remain elevated until global oil flows return ​to normal ⁠levels and oil inventories are replenished," the agency said.

High oil prices, a reduction in fuel availability, and governmental initiatives designed to conserve oil will cause global oil demand to shrink this year for the ⁠first ​time since the pandemic-related slump of 2020, the EIA said.

The ​agency now expects a reduction in demand this year of 1.1 million bpd, reversing its earlier forecast of a rise of 200,000 ​bpd.

Reporting by Shariq Khan and Scott DiSavino in New York; Editing by Mark Porter and Paul Simao

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