NEW YORK, Oct 1 (Reuters) - U.S. crude oil inventories rose
sharply last week while gasoline stocks showed an unexpected
build, according to data from the U.S. Energy Information
Administration released on Wednesday.
Distillate stocks fell more than expected in the week to
Sept. 26.
HIGHLIGHTS FROM EIA REPORT (In million barrels):
- Crude +4.3 (forecast +2.4)
- Distillate -2.3 (forecast -1.2)
- Gasoline +0.9 (forecast -1.6)
Click here for the EIA status report []
Click here for the API status report []
ANALYST COMMENTS
TIM EVANS, ENERGY ANALYST, CITI FUTURES PERSPECTIVE, NEW YORK:
"The overall tenor of the EIA report was bearish relative
to expectations, with a larger-than-expected 4.3 million
barrels build in crude stocks on a big 1.8 million barrels per
day jump in imports.
The build in gasoline stocks was also a surprise, with
production reported up 736,000 bpd from the prior week versus
demand that was 11,000 bpd lower. The distillates draw was
larger than expected, but not a full offset to the other
data."
MARK WAGGONER, PRESIDENT, EXCEL FUTURES, HUNTINGTON BEACH,
CALIFORNIA:
"The EIA numbers are not too far from what the market
forecast and so people will still be looking at developments in
Congress about the financial rescue package.
The market is on a wait-and-see attitude in this regard and
we might see crude prices fall towards $90, if not today,
tomorrow perhaps. I still see the financial bailout passing
Congress, but the House of Representatives' approving it is the
tough part. The markets are still keyed on all that's happening
in Washington."
AMANDA KURZENDOERFER, COMMODITIES ANALYST, SUMMIT ENERGY,
LOUISVILLE, KENTUCKY
"Crude and gasoline inventories built, so that was bearish
for the market overall. Distillates fell -- distillate
inventories usually begin to decline at this time of year.
"Distillate inventories are at the bottom of the five-year
range, but they usually begin to drop (around this time of
year), so it is not as concerning as it might have been a few
weeks ago. Demand is pretty weak, I think that is what is
keeping it from being supportive."
MARK KELLSTROM, ANALYST, STRATEGIC ENERGY RESEARCH, SUMMIT,
NJ
"The numbers look bearish.
Recent EIA data about U.S. demand has also been negative.
This probably continues to weigh on crude prices. But we would
say that inventories are still relatively low compared to
five-year averages. Gasoline stocks are near 40-year lows.
On crude prices, we're gonna find out ... whether demand
fears can be overcome by federal fiscal bailouts and central
bank inflation."
(New York Energy Desk, 646-223-6050)