Bloomberg
Over the past four months, investor optimism that global crude prices will rise has slumped by almost half.
Hedge funds’ net-bullish position on Brent crude, a measure of how positive money managers are that prices will gain, has plunged 49 percent since early April as trade wars cloud the picture for oil consumption. Despite a good week for the benchmark amid strikes at North Sea fields and declines in US stockpiles, Brent remains about 6 percent down from this year’s peak in May.
“When you start to look at the different economies across the globe — Europe, Asia, the emerging markets are definitely starting to hit some headwinds,†said Mark Watkins, who helps oversee $151 billion at US Bank Wealth Management. Investors “are potentially getting a little bit more concerned about the rest of 2018, and probably going into 2019, that demand
might be a little bit softer than previously had been.â€
The exchange of tariffs between the US and China is one factor that threatens to weaken global economic growth and hurt energy demand. Technical indicators also pointed to a potential decline in prices: During the period covered by the report, Brent’s 50-day moving average dropped below its 100-day one, an invitation to sell.
Hedge funds’ net-long position — the difference between bets on higher prices and wagers on a drop — in Brent was reduced to 324,431 contracts, ICE Futures Europe data show for the week ended August 21.
The net-long position in West Texas Intermediate crude, the American benchmark, slid 4 percent to 327,742 futures and options, the lowest level in two months, according to the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission. Longs and shorts both rose. Money managers cut their net-long positions on benchmark US gasoline and diesel both by about 11 percent, according to the CFTC.