Gasoline Archives - Page 9 of 55 - Flux News

Gasoline

Gasoline is a key fuel for automobiles, playing a central role in powering personal and commercial vehicles, underpinning the mobility that fuels economic activities around the world.

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European Window: Brent Falls, Recovers to $64.38/bbl

The Dec’25 Brent Futures contract fell once again this afternoon, from $65.06/bbl at 12:00 BST to $64.38/bbl at 17:02 BST (time of writing). Reuters reported that India has likely exported the all-time high monthly volume of diesel to Europe in September. Volumes are estimated between 9.7mb/d and 10.4mb/d; this increase has been speculated to be due to higher premiums and capacity shortages during maintenance in Europe, incentivising Indian refiners to ship more fuel to the west. Following this surge, export volumes could decline as India is set to jump seasonally with the Diwali festival in late October. Elsewhere, Alberta has proposed a new oil pipeline to the British Columbia coast that could carry up to 1mb/d of crude oil for exportation to Asian markets. The proposal has met swift opposition, especially by the British Columbian government itself, which has historically opposed new pipeline building. In other news, Colonial Pipeline has shut down all three of its main delivery lines due to an outage that began around 10:00 BST today, two traders told Reuters. One trader said the disruption was linked to “computer issues.” Finally, the front month Nov/Dec’26 and 6-month Dec/Jun’26 spreads are at $0.27/bbl and $0.45/bbl, respectively.

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European Window: Brent Falls, Recovers to $65.78/bbl

The Dec’25 Brent Futures contract dipped this afternoon before recovering, from $65.68/bbl at 12:00 BST to $65.24/bbl at 14:00 BST and rallying to $65.78/bbl at 17:25 BST (time of writing). In the news, Indian imports of Russian crude oil dipped last month, averaging 1.61mb/d, down 1.72mb/d from August and 16% lower as compared to Sep 2024. Bloomberg reported that Indian refiners appear to be gradually broadening their supply basket, though Russian crude continues to account for roughly a third of all crude arrivals in the country. In other news, major US oil companies and their top managers have been targeted by the Sanaa-based Humanitarian Operations Coordination Center (HOCC), a body set up last year to liaise between Houthi forces and commercial shipping operators. As reported by Reuters, the sanctions are in retaliation for US sanctions imposed on the Houthis this year despite a truce agreement with the Trump administration. It is unclear whether these sanctions signal that the Houthis will begin targeting vessels linked to the sanctioned organizations and individuals; this would risk violation of the Trump administration’s ceasefire agreements. In other news, Iraqi Oil Minister Hayyan Abdul Ghani has said that Iraq plans to increase its oil production capacity to 5.5mb/d by the end of this year and plans to have an output capacity of at or above 6mb/d by 2029. Finally, at time of writing, the front-month Dec/Jan’26 and 6-month Dec/June’26 spreads are at $0.37/bbl and $0.89/bbl respectively.

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European Window: Brent recovers above $67.00/bbl

The Nov’25 Brent Futures Contract found support early this afternoon, rising to $67.17/bbl at 14:00 BST before falling briefly to $66.99/bbl at 15:00 BST and recovering to $67.14/bbl at 17:00 BST. In Nigera, a meeting between the Nigerian government, the trade union PENGASSAN, and Dangote (originally planned for today at 14:00 BST) was moved behind doors to the Nigerian Office of the National Security Adviser. A Nigerian official later downplayed the impact of the workers’ strike, claiming a minimal impact, as reported by Bloomberg. In the news, Reuters reported in the early afternoon that OPEC+ was likely to consider a larger oil production increase of up to 500kb/d over 3 months at its meeting on Sunday. Later in the afternoon, however, OPEC+ dismissed these claims via their official X account. OPEC+ claims that discussions have yet to begin. Elsewhere, the US Administration’s pressure on remaining buyers of Russian crude is seemingly backfiring, as Russia’s crude oil exports by sea have hit their highest level since May 2024, reports Bloomberg. Russia exported on average 3.62mb/d in the 4 weeks to 28 Sep, signalling that neither India nor any other major buyers have reduced purchases. In other news, ExxonMobil has announced a layoff of 2,000 workers globally, half of which will be from Imperial Oil, according to an official statement. Finally, at time of writing, the front-month Nov/Dec and 6-month Nov/May spreads are at $0.78/bbl and $1.73/bbl respectively.

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Gasoline Report

Gasoline and Naphtha Report: Just Stop Dangote

Gasoline Summary
The gasoline complex saw cracks initially correct lower before finding renewed strength at the end of last week, following the news from Dangote. On 28 Sep, Nigeria’s oil workers’ union, PENGASSAN, has ordered members to cut crude and gas supply to Dangote, escalating a labour dispute after hundreds of workers were dismissed. The Oct’25 EBOB crack saw an incredibly bullish reaction, rising to $16.50/bbl, nearly the highest level reached this year for the M1 crack. Dangote issues will likely pull more gasoline exports towards the WAF region, compounding supply tightness concerns from Ukrainian drone attacks and Europe’s loss of refinery capacity this year.

Naphtha Summary
The naphtha market weakened at the end of last week, but saw more support into this week. NWE cracks slid from a high of above -$3/bbl on 22 Sep to -$4.27/bbl on 26 Sep but climbed to -$3.70/bbl at the time of writing on 29 Sep. Shorts are now out of the money on their Nov’25 NWE crack positions, which may encourage new selling. Moreover, we may see speculative players roll their Oct’25 NWE crack shorts to Nov’25 ahead of the new month, which may further pressure the contract in the near-term. On the technical side, prices are meeting resistance at the Ichimoku cloud, which may cap gains in the near term. Naphtha stocks at the Amsterdam-Rotterdam-Antwerp (ARA) hub climbed a marginal 0.3% in the week ending 25 Sep to 10.33mb, as per Insights Global data (formerly PJK International).

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European Window: Brent Drops Nearly $2/bbl to $67.87/bbl

The Nov’25 Brent Futures Contract fell this afternoon, dropping nearly $2 from $69.03/bbl at 13:00 BST to $67.87/bbl at 17:46 BST (time of writing). Kurdistan also restarted crude oil flows on Saturday, with export volumes expected to reach full capacity over the next few days, effectively pushing prices down. The Algerian government has seen declining revenues from oil and gas, pushing them to plan a seven-year Islamic bond issue of $2.3 billion, as quoted by Bloomberg. In other geopolitical news, US President Trump hosted Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu for pivotal talks on Monday to press him to back a Gaza peace proposal, according to Reuters. Finally, the front-month Nov/Dec and 6-month Nov/May spreads are at $0.82/bbl and $1.93/bbl respectively.

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Refinery Margins Report

In the week ending 26 September Refinery Margins strengthened across all regions: Asia M1 up to $10.08/bbl (+$0.93/bbl w/w), European M1 Margins up to $9.25/bbl (+$0.13/bbl w/w), and US Margins up to $14.58/bbl (+$0.30/bbl w/w)

Strength in the Gasoil Brent Crack and Dubai product cracks drove up Asian Margins. The first increasing by +$4.90/bbl, whereas with the Kero/Dubai crack, and the GO Dubai Crack rose by +$2.35/bbl and +$2.26/bbl respectively.

Cracks in Europe were mixed: GO and 3.5 Bgs Cracks increased by $1.92/bbl and $0.90/bbl respectively whereas Naphtha, and 0.5 Bgs Cracks fell by -$1.25/bbl, and -$0.60/bbl respectively.

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European Window: Brent Breaks $70/bbl

The Nov’25 Brent Futures Contract rallied to $70.75/bbl at 16:02 BST before softening to $60.26/bbl at 17:33 BST (time of writing). In the news, Dangote Petroleum Refinery has reportedly laid off all of its Nigerian workers, citing a “total reorganisation” following alleged sabotage incidents. The move came less than 24 hours after 90% of the workforce joined the Petroleum and Natural Gas Senior Staff Association of Nigeria, raising concerns about union-busting. Despite this Dangote claimed that over 3,000 Nigerian staff remain employed. In other news, Mexico’s state oil firm Pemex exported 500kb/d of crude in August, down 32% from a year earlier, as domestic refineries processed more oil. The company’s seven refineries handled just over 1.05 mb/d, while total crude and condensate output was 1.64 mb/d flat from recent months but below last year’s levels. Exports are expected to fall further, dropping to 489 kb/d next year and 393 kb/dover the next decade. Despite being a top oil producer, Mexico still imports refined products due to the inefficiency of Pemex’s refineries in processing heavy Maya crude. Several terminal operators in China’s Shandong province will ban old and suspicious vessels from docking at Huangdao Port starting 1 November, according to Reuters. The move targets tankers over 31 years old, those with fake IMO numbers, invalid certificates, or recent accident or pollution records, restrictions that appear aimed at curbing the shadow fleet used for Iranian oil exports. Huangdao is a key entry point for Iranian crude into China, which buys over 90% of Iran’s exports. Iran, meanwhile, remains defiant, vowing to continue oil sales to China despite looming UN snapback sanctions. Finally, the front-month Nov/Dec and 6-month Nov/May spreads are at $0.90/bbl and $2.47/bbl respectively.

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European Window: Brent Rises Above $69/bbl

The Nov’25 Brent futures initially traded down to the $68.50/bbl level before climbing back towards $69.30/bbl, where prices have faced resistance over the past day. The next hurdle would be the psychological $70/bbl level. In the news, Indian officials have told the Trump administration that a significant reduction in Russian oil imports would require Washington to instead allow crude purchases from sanctioned suppliers Iran and Venezuela. Slovak PM Robert Fico said on Thursday that Slovakia expects to find “common ground” with the US after pressure to end Russian energy purchases, defending receiving supplies from Moscow and stating that Slovakia’s purchases amount to 2% of Russia’s revenue and have “no impact on financing the war”. Russia will introduce a partial ban on diesel exports until the end of the year and extend an existing ban on gasoline exports, said deputy PM Alexander Novak. The diesel ban applies to re-sellers but not to producers. The gasoline ban covers producers as well as re-sellers, but does not affect inter-governmental agreements between Russia and a number of other countries, such as Mongolia. Finally, the front Nov/Dec and 6-month Nov/May’26 spreads are at $0.84/bbl and $2.22/bbl respectively.

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Trader Meeting Notes: Fly Me to the $70/bbl Handle

What a week it has been for the M1 Brent futures contract, which finally broke out of a long consolidation phase to sit at $69.30/bbl at the time of writing on 25 Sep. Technical traders would appreciate that the M1 Brent futures has broken out of a two-month-long triangle on the upside…

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European Window: Brent Rises to $69/bbl

Nov’25 Brent futures rallied over the afternoon but failed to maintain strength above $68.00/bbl around 16.30 BST, and softened to $67.68/bbl at the time of writing at 17.05 BST. At the 80th UN General Assembly, US President Donald Trump accused India and China of funding Russia’s war in Ukraine through energy purchases. He warned that if Moscow refuses peace, the US is ready to impose strong tariffs, effective only if Europe joins by ending Russian energy imports. Trump said he would press European leaders on this in New York, reiterating his claim that the war would be the “easiest to end.”. Russia’s Primorsk port is running crude oil loadings two to three days late after a September 12 Ukrainian drone strike damaged two Aframax tankers and port infrastructure. Other vessels, including the Jasmine bound for China, departed behind schedule. The delays may cut exports below the planned 900 kb/d, with Russia redirecting flows from other ports as drone attacks on its energy facilities continue. A deal to resume 230 kb/d of Kurdish oil exports via Turkiye stalled as major producers DNO and Genel demanded repayment assurances on about $1 billion in arrears. Iraq’s cabinet was set to approve the agreement, but the companies have yet to sign on. DNO, owed roughly $300 million, said it had proposed “easy fixes” to move talks forward. Exxon Mobil has begun production at new facilities in its Singapore refinery, converting residue fuel into higher-value base stocks and distillates, boosting capacity by 20,000 barrels per day. Crude imports hit a record 541 kb/d in August, with the refinery shifting fully to high-sulphur crude since April. Finally, at the time of writing, the Nov/Dec’25 and Nov/May’25 Brent futures spreads stand at $0.64/bbl and $1.69/bbl, respectively.

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COT Report: Refinery Blitz

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.

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European Window: Brent Resistance at $68/bbl

Nov’25 Brent futures rallied over the afternoon but failed to maintain strength above $68.00/bbl around 16.30 BST, and softened to $67.68/bbl at the time of writing at 17.05 BST. At the 80th UN General Assembly, US President Donald Trump accused India and China of funding Russia’s war in Ukraine through energy purchases. He warned that if Moscow refuses peace, the US is ready to impose strong tariffs, effective only if Europe joins by ending Russian energy imports. Trump said he would press European leaders on this in New York, reiterating his claim that the war would be the “easiest to end.”. Russia’s Primorsk port is running crude oil loadings two to three days late after a September 12 Ukrainian drone strike damaged two Aframax tankers and port infrastructure. Other vessels, including the Jasmine bound for China, departed behind schedule. The delays may cut exports below the planned 900 kb/d, with Russia redirecting flows from other ports as drone attacks on its energy facilities continue. A deal to resume 230 kb/d of Kurdish oil exports via Turkiye stalled as major producers DNO and Genel demanded repayment assurances on about $1 billion in arrears. Iraq’s cabinet was set to approve the agreement, but the companies have yet to sign on. DNO, owed roughly $300 million, said it had proposed “easy fixes” to move talks forward. Exxon Mobil has begun production at new facilities in its Singapore refinery, converting residue fuel into higher-value base stocks and distillates, boosting capacity by 20,000 barrels per day. Crude imports hit a record 541 kb/d in August, with the refinery shifting fully to high-sulphur crude since April. Finally, at the time of writing, the Nov/Dec’25 and Nov/May’25 Brent futures spreads stand at $0.64/bbl and $1.69/bbl, respectively.

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