Distillates

Distillate fuels, including diesel and jet fuel, power transportation systems and industries worldwide, driving economic activity and global connectivity.

Find live prices on Flux Terminal. Trade distillates cost-free on Onyx Markets.

European Window cover

European Window: Brent Inches Down To $72.75/bbl

The Feb’25 Brent futures contract declined marginally from $72.90/bbl at 12:00 GMT to a touch under $72.75/bbl at 17:50 GMT (time of writing). In the news today, Russian President Putin said Moscow launched more than 90 missiles and 100 drones that hit 17 targets in Ukraine, leaving more than 1 million people without power…

Read More

Overnight & Singapore Window: Brent Recovers to $73.40/bbl

After Jan’25 Brent futures initially fell from $72.80/bbl at 07:00 GMT to $72.40/bbl at 08:15 GMT this morning, the Jan’25 contract made a recovery to $73.30/bbl at 10:30 GMT (time of writing). In the news today, Ukraine’s energy minister said the country’s power infrastructure was “under massive enemy attack”, after a nationwide air raid alert was declared due to incoming missiles. In other news, Asia’s crude oil imports are expected to increase to 26.42mb/d in November, up marginally from October’s 26.11mb/d and 26.24 mb/d in September, according to data compiled by LSEG Oil Research. However, from the period January to November 2024, average Asian crude oil imports are estimated to have declined y/y by 370kb/d. Finally, OPEC+ has postponed its online meeting to discuss oil production strategy from 1 Dec to 5 Dec. OPEC’s secretariat stated the delay was because several ministers will attend the meeting of the Gulf Cooperation Council in Kuwait on 1 Dec, as per Bloomberg. At the time of writing, the Jan/Feb’25 and Jan/Jul’25 Brent futures spreads stand at $0.54/bbl and $1.82/bbl, respectively.

Read More
European Window cover

European Window: Brent Weakens To $72.45/bbl

The Jan’25 Brent futures contract has weakened this afternoon, falling from $73.05/bbl at 12:00 GMT to $72.45/bbl at 17:50 GMT (time of writing). EIA data for the week to 22 Nov showed a larger-than-expected draw of 1.84mb in US crude oil inventories, compared to a build of 0.5mb the prior week. In the news today, Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Sergei Ryabkov warned the US today to halt a “spiral of escalation” over Ukraine, stating “you mustn’t supply Kyiv with everything they want”, according to Reuters. Meanwhile, Russian state news agency TASS quoted an official saying Moscow was working to put its Sarmat ICBM, part of its strategic nuclear arsenal, on combat duty. In other news, the Kazakh Energy Ministry has proposed widening the current six-month ban on fuel exports to gasoline, jet fuel and bitumen, starting January 2025, according to Interfax. Finally, Prax is continuing to work toward buying Shell’s minority stake in the Schwedt oil refinery in east Germany, as per Bloomberg. The shareholder structure of the Schwedt refinery has been complicated by the involvement of Russia’s Rosneft, whose stake was seized by the German government. At the time of writing, the Jan/Feb’25 and Jan/Jul’25 Brent futures spreads stand at $0.60/bbl and $1.68/bbl, respectively.

Read More

COT Report: Trading Thanksgiving

See all the updates across the barrel in this week’s Onyx Commitment of Traders report, as well as six contracts to watch. Click on the relevant button below to access your COT report.

Read More

Overnight & Singapore Window: Brent lnches Up to $73/bbl

The Jan’25 Brent futures contract saw strength this morning amid rangebound price action, increasing from $72.90/bbl at 07:00 GMT to $73.05/bbl at 10:40 GMT (time of writing). Prices saw a brief dip to around $72.70/bbl at 09:10 GMT before rising to this morning’s high of $73.30/bbl at 09:35 GMT. In the news today, the Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire approved on Wednesday has taken effect with no reports of early violations of the 60-day truce, according to Bloomberg…

Read More
European Window cover

European Window: Brent Falls To $72.30/bbl

The Jan’25 Brent futures contract initially traded rangebound around high $73/bbl levels this afternoon, before falling to $72.30/bbl level at 18:00 GMT (time of writing). There was a brief spike to $74.25/bbl just before 14:45 GMT as a Bloomberg report revealed that OPEC+ had begun talks on delaying the restart of oil production again.

Read More
European Window cover

European Window: Brent Futures Weakens To $73.10/bbl

The Jan’25 Brent futures contract declined this afternoon from $75.15/bbl at 12:00 GMT down to around $73.10/bbl at 17:40 GMT (time of writing). Bearish sentiment prevailed this afternoon while markets turned focus to talks of an Israel-Hezbollah ceasefire. A senior Israeli official said today that Israel’s cabinet would meet on Tuesday to approve a ceasefire deal with Hezbollah, according to Reuters. Meanwhile, a senior US official told Axios today that both Israel and Lebanon agreed to the terms of a ceasefire agreement with a 60-day transition period during which the Israeli military would withdraw from southern Lebanon. In other news, a Reuters report stated that incoming US President Trump is drafting an energy package to expand domestic oil and gas drilling, in addition to expediting LNG export permits. Finally, Kazakhstan could increase its crude oil exports out of Turkey’s port of Ceyhan, with Kazakhstan’s Energy Minister Almasadam Satkaliyev claiming exports via the Baku-Tbilisi-Ceyhan (BTC) pipeline could increase to 20 million metric tons a year from the current 1.5 million, not specifying an exact time frame. At the time of writing, the Jan/Feb’25 and Jan/Jul’25 Brent futures spreads stand at $0.57/bbl and $1.74/bbl, respectively.

Read More

Refinery Margins Report

Click below to explore our new Refinery Margins Report, offering a clear, detailed analysis of weekly and monthly shifts in key regional refinery margins. This report enables readers to pinpoint where margins are tightening or loosening across regions, drawing on proprietary yields and our leading market share in swaps to build a world class financial refinery margin—essential for understanding the evolving landscape of regional refinery economics.

Read More
European Window cover

European Window: Brent Reaches $75/bbl

The Jan’25 Brent futures contract was supported this afternoon, moving up more than $1 from $73.80/bbl at 12:00 GMT to $75.05/bbl at 17:35 GMT (time of writing). Geopolitical tensions remain at the forefront as Ukraine’s ex-military Commander-in-Chief Valery Zaluzhny stated “the Third World War has begun” today, speaking at the Ukrainska Pravda’s UP100 award ceremony. In the news, Gunvor has undertaken a temporary economic shutdown of its Rotterdam refinery, with a capacity of less than 80kb/d, due to a “lack of prompt availability of commercially viable feedstock”. Closure will be effective as of 25 Nov according to Bloomberg. In other news, Kazakhstan’s Tengiz oil field is now producing 10,000 tonnes per day less than planned after repairs, KazMunayGas CEO Askhat Khasenov said. Finally, Russia’s Lukoil is restoring operations of its catalytic cracker complex at their NORSI oil refinery, after breaking down on 13 Nov. NORSI refines about 16 million tons of crude per year, or 5.8% of Russia’s total refined crude, as per Reuters. At the time of writing, the Jan/Feb’25 and Jan/Jul’25 Brent futures spreads stand at $0.45/bbl and $1.77/bbl, respectively.

Read More

Overnight & Singapore Window: Brent Climbs To $74.40/bbl

The Jan’25 Brent futures contract strengthened this morning from $74.20/bbl at 07:00 GMT up to just over $74.80/bbl at 08:15 GMT. We saw a decline to $74.18/bbl by 09:15 GMT, however, recovered to around $74.40/bbl at 10:45 GMT (time of writing). Crude oil prices were elevated today as markets continue to focus on rising geopolitical tensions between Russia and Ukraine. In the news today, Russian Deputy Prime Minister Alexander Novak said at a meeting with OPEC that Russia’s energy market is under significant pressure and they will continue to develop cooperation with OPEC countries, according to a Reuters report. Meanwhile, Russia is estimated to have supplied North Korea with more than 1mb of oil since March this year, according to satellite imagery analysis from the Open Source Centre. In other news, Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban stated he would invite Israeli Prime Minister Netanyahu to visit Hungary, guaranteeing that the International Criminal Court arrest warrant against Netanyahu would “not be observed”. Finally, Iran’s nuclear chief Mohammad Eslami has issued an order to launch a series of new and advanced centrifuges, in response to an IAEA resolution on 21 Nov condemning Tehran’s nuclear cooperation and transparency. At the time of writing, the Jan/Feb’25 and Jan/Jul’25 Brent futures spreads stand at $0.52/bbl and $1.70/bbl, respectively.

Read More
European Window cover

European Window: Brent Weakens to $73.55/bbl

The Jan’25 Brent futures contract declined from an intraday peak of $74.37/bbl at 12:30 GMT down to $73.55/bbl at 17:40 GMT (time of writing). In the news today, China is projected to import around 11.4mb/d of crude oil in November, the highest volumes since August imports of 11.56mb/d, according to Reuters citing tanker-tracking and port data by LSEG and Kpler. In other news, Russian refineries are likely to reduce or keep their crude throughputs unchanged in the coming weeks as the gasoline export ban, persistent rail delays, and increases in excise taxes continue to hurt margins, as per S&P Global. Finally, the ICC has issued arrest warrants for Israeli PM Netanyahu, his former defence chief Yoav Gallant, and a Hamas leader, Ibrahim al-Masri, for alleged war crimes and crimes against humanity in the Gaza conflict. According to a Financial Times report, Israel stated in August that Ibrahim al-Masri was killed in an airstrike in Gaza a month earlier. At the time of writing, the Jan/Feb’25 and Jan/Jul’25 Brent futures spreads stand at $0.41/bbl and $1.38/bbl, respectively.

Read More
Trader Meeting Notes

Trader Meeting Notes: Tug-of-War

This week has seen a battle between bullish and bearish forces, kicking off with a focus on poor Chinese oil demand as China’s refinery run rates fell for the seventh month in a row, down 4.6% y/y. Moreover, China’s VAT rebate reduction stoked fears of lower clean oil product exports for 2025. This initial bearish momentum was compounded by waning geopolitical risk in the Middle East, with Hezbollah agreeing to a US proposal for a ceasefire and ongoing Israeli strikes on Lebanon now firmly priced in….

Read More