Naphtha Archives - Page 14 of 52 - Flux News

Naphtha

Naphtha serves as a versatile feedstock for the petrochemical industry, crucial in producing plastics, synthetic fibers, and various chemicals that contribute significantly to manufacturing and industrial processes.

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

European Window report cover

European Window: Brent Falls Below $69.00/bbl

The Sep’25 Brent Futures contract initially rallied to $69.02 at 13:34 BST before falling to $68.21 at 15:08. Prices have since slightly recovered to $68.33/bbl at 17:35 BST (time of writing). In the news, US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent will meet with his Chinese counterpart in Stockholm next week to discuss a likely extension of 12 August deadline for a trade deal. Bessent described the current US-China trade relationship as “constructive,” highlighting recent progress including China ending its rare earth export ban and the US resuming key tech exports. Without a deal or extension, tariffs could revert to 145% on US goods and 125% on Chinese goods. In other news, Halliburton reported that declining crude production in Mexico is increasing pressure to revive business, but ongoing payment delays from state-run Pemex continue to hinder operations. Pemex’s crude and condensate output dropped 8.4% in May to 1.64 mb/d. Due to unresolved payment issues many oilfield service companies have scaled back activity. Halliburton expects its international revenue for 2025 to decline by mid-single digits, largely due to reduced activity in Mexico and Saudi Arabia. Russia’s oil and gas revenue is projected to drop by about 37% y/y in July 2025 to 680 Bn roubles, due to lower oil prices and a stronger rouble, according to Reuters estimates. The finance ministry has already cut its full-year revenue forecast from 10.94 trillion to 8.32 trillion roubles, down from 11.13 trillion in 2024. Official figures are expected on 5 August. Finally, the front-month Sep/Oct and 6-month Sep/Mar’26 spreads are at $0.79/bbl and $2.07/bbl respectively.

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European Window report cover

European Window: Brent below $69/bbl

The Sep’25 Brent futures contract saw lower highs over the afternoon. The contract fell from over $69.20/bbl at 13.45 BST to below $68.45/bbl at 15.09 BST. Although the contract rose above $69.00/bbl around 16.05-16.15 BST, it failed to maintain this and is at $68.95/bbl at 17.20 BST (time of writing). The Lindsey Oil Refinery in North East Lincolnshire will shut after the government failed to find a buyer, following owner Prax’s administration last month, putting 420 jobs at risk. Energy Minister Michael Shanks criticised Prax’s handling, urged them to support workers, and announced guaranteed employment for the coming months plus government-funded training to help workers transition into clean energy jobs, while the Official Receiver seeks buyers for individual assets. Iraq plans to boost crude oil shipments next month, increasing destination-free Basrah Medium exports to around 18mb (20-30% above average). This expansion, part of a broader OPEC+ production surge amid a global supply surplus, includes both destination-free and restricted shipments of Basrah Medium, Basrah Heavy, and Qayara grades. Zambia’s state-owned Industrial Development Corp. signed an MoU with China’s Fujian Xiang Xin Corp. to build a $1.1 billion oil refinery in Ndola, Copperbelt province, with a planned capacity of 60kb/d. The IDC did not disclose the source or transport plans for the crude oil feedstock. Britain imposed new sanctions on two Russian firms: Intershipping Services and oil trader Litasco Middle East DMCC, to pressure Moscow, adding them to its Russia sanctions regime. The update also included 137 additional designations, according to a government notice. US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said that the next round of US-China talks may address China’s purchases of sanctioned Russian and Iranian oil, shifting trade negotiations toward national security issues. He warned that buyers of Russian oil could face up to 100% secondary tariffs, urging European allies to follow suit – “I would urge our European allies, who have talked a big game, to follow us if we implement these secondary tariffs”. At the time of writing, the front-month (Sep/Oct’25) and Sep/Mar’26 Brent futures spreads stand at $0.77/bbl and $2.13/bbl, respectively.

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Refinery Margins Report

– In the week ending 18 July, refinery margins declined slightly across all tenors, with the Asian refinery margin remaining almost unchanged in the prompt but weakening systematically down the curve.

– In the prompt, crude and products saw a relatively quiet week, with slight crude weakness and diesel/gasoil strength providing support to margins across regions, with Asian and European margins increasing by $0.03/bbl and $0.48/bbl, respectively.

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European Window report cover

European Window: Brent sells-off below $70/bbl

The Sep’25 Brent futures contract initially climbed to $70.75/bbl around 13:20 BST, where it met resistance. Despite fighting to remain above the critical $70/bbl handle at first, prices ultimately sold off and stand at $69.30/bbl at 17:30 BST (time of writing).

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COT Deep Dive – Sing 0.5% Crack

In this publication, we leverage Onyx’s proprietary Commitment of Traders data in order to identify changes in swap Open Interest and Positioning against Onyx with a view, in conjunction with long/short entry price levels and volatility analysis to identify potential continuation or reversal trends. In this edition, we take a look at the Aug’25 Sing 0.5% Crack.

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COT Deep Dive – Brent/Dubai

In this publication, we leverage Onyx’s proprietary Commitment of Traders data in order to identify changes in swap Open Interest and Positioning against Onyx with a view, in conjunction with long/short entry price levels and volatility analysis to identify potential continuation or reversal trends. In this edition, we take a look at the Aug’25 Brent/Dubai contract. 

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Trader Meeting Notes report cover

Trader Meeting Notes: A whole lot of nothing

It is hard to keep Brent away from the $60s, with price action slipping from $71.55/bbl at the start of the week to $68.90/bbl at the time of writing on 17 Jul. Nevertheless, NWE and Asian refinery margins remain supported, bolstered by robust gasoil cracks, despite larger-than-expected EIA-reported gasoline and distillate fuel oil builds. Onyx’s CFTC predicting model anticipates producers/merchants to add to their ICE LS gasoil and RBOB shorts in the week ending 15 Jul, which, if true, should signal rising refiner hedging at these levels. On the macro side, nobody seems to be reacting too much to trade tensions, although the EU has prepared a list of potential retaliatory tariffs in case trade talks with Washington break down. Meanwhile, Washington has also threatened sanctions on buyers of Russian exports should the Kremlin fail to secure a ceasefire deal with Ukraine – a decision that does not seem to faze India’s energy minister Hardeep Singh Puri, who remains confident India can meet its oil needs from alternative sources. Also in Washington, President Donald Trump has been desperately trying to steer his loyalists’ attention away from Jeffrey Epstein and onto more important matters, such as coercing Coca-Cola to switch from high fructose corn syrup to cane sugar. President Trump also reportedly showed off a draft of a letter firing Federal Reserve Chair Jerome Powell on 15 Jul, although he has since flipped to saying that he is “not planning” to fire Powell. While the DXY seems to have recovered from an intraday low of 97.714, Mr. Powell’s confidence likely has not.

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European Window report cover

European Window: Brent breaks above $69/bbl

The Sep’25 Brent futures contract has seen a choppy afternoon, albeit still rangebound around $68/bbl. Prices finally broke above $69/bbl around 16:30 BST and stand at $69.36/bbl at 17:35 BST (time of writing), where they appear to be meeting resistance.

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Naphtha Report cover

Naphtha Report: Reforming Resilience

The naphtha market has been relatively lacklustre over the fortnight as price action largely stabilised. The Dangote refinery importing naphtha for its reformer sparked bullish sentiment, but news of the refinery moving forward its turnaround from August to July quickly reignited the bears. The Bal-Jul/Aug’25 NWE spread flipped out of contango, rising from -$1.75 to $1.50/mt by 9 July, before giving back its gains. Similarly, the Aug/Sep’25 spread peaked at $4.25/mt before correcting lower to $1.75/mt. However, despite the bearish physical sentiment in Europe, this has not necessarily translated into paper weakness. Price action in the cracks were largely rangebound, with the front trading between -$6 and -$5/bbl. However, crack rolls have seen weakness, with Q4/Q1 falling from $0.35 to $0.15/bbl over the fortnight, highlighting the weak sentiment in the front and continued buying interest for winter. Here, Cal26 cracks saw real buying between -$6.25 and -$6.15/bbl, while Q1’26 saw scaleback buying. Going forward, the Aug/Sep’25 NWE spread should be closely monitored, as it could be indicative of physical agendas for August pricing.

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European Window report cover

European Window: Brent Supported At $68/bbl

The Sep’25 Brent crude futures briefly fell below $68/bbl but was supported above that level on Wednesday afternoon, trading at $68.22/bbl at 17:30 BST (time of writing). EIA stats indicated a 3.9mb draw in crude inventories in the week ending 11 July, against API indications of 800kb build. Commercial stocks are still 8% below the 5-year average for this time of the year. India’s oil imports from Russia rose marginally in 1H25, at 1.75mb/d, with Reliance and Nayara Energy making almost half the purchases. Egypt’s diesel and gasoil imports reached a record 370kb/d in the first half of July, 65% higher y/y. Rising imports have diverted barrels away from northwest Europe to the Med, likely exacerbating the tightness in ICE gasoil. Drone attacks on Iraq’s Kurdistan region have reduced crude production by approximately 140 to 150kb/d, according to two energy officials. Finally, the front (Sep/Oct) and 6-month (Sep/Mar) Brent futures spreads are at $0.89/bbl and $2.36/bbl respectively.

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COT Report: Sweet Spot

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 report cover

European Window: Brent Falls to $68.80/bbl

The Sep’25 Brent futures contract fell to $68.78/bbl at 15:11 BST, before rallying up ot $69.31 at 16:31 BST. Prices have since fallen back to $68.80/bbl at 17:25 BST (time of writing). In the news, Iraq has signed a preliminary deal with US company HKN Energy to develop the Himreen oilfield in northern Iraq, with plans to increase production to 60kb/d from the current 20kb/d to 25kb/d. This announcement coincides with HKN Energy reporting an explosion that halted production at the Sarsang oilfield in the Kurdistan region. In other news, the European Commission has promised to address Slovakia’s concerns about the EU’s plan to phase out Russian gas imports by 1 January 2028, in order to secure agreement on a new sanctions package against Russia. Slovakia has been blocking the sanctions package, warning that quitting Russian gas could trigger shortages, higher prices and transit fees, and legal claims from Gazprom. The EU aims to finalise the sanctions package at a foreign ministers’ meeting, where unanimous approval is needed. The separate proposal to ban Russian gas however, only needs a reinforced majority, meaning Slovakia cannot single-handedly veto it. Nigeria aims to secure a higher OPEC+ production target of 2 mb/d for 2027, up from its current quota of 1.5 mb/d. Despite historically producing below quota due to challenges like oil theft and pipeline vandalism, Nigeria has recently increased output to about 1.4 mb/d. The government is pushing oil companies to boost production, and talks are underway within OPEC+ to set 2027 quotas. Finally, the front-month Sep/Oct spread is at $0.91/bbl and the 6-month Sep/Mar’26 spread is at $2.39/bbl.

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European Window report cover

European Window: Brent Under $70.00/bbl

Sep’25 Brent futures were under pressure this afternoon from $71.35/bbl at 13:30 BST to $69.55/bbl at 17:25 BST (time of writing). Although Trump warned of possible 100% secondary tariffs on Russia if a ceasefire isn’t achieved within 50 days, the lack of immediate action put pressure on prices. The Euro recovered to around 1.1689 against the US Dollar USD after hitting a two-week low of 1.1654 earlier. The pair had slipped after Trump threatened 30% tariffs on European imports from 1 Aug, but a softer USD and hopes of talks helped it rebound. Meanwhile, the US Dollar Index held flat below 98.00 ahead of key CPI data and trade updates. Indonesia’s plan to buy up to $15 billion in US energy products hinges on tariff talks, Energy Minister Bahlil Lahadalia said today. He warned the deal won’t proceed if Washington moves ahead with a planned 32% tariff on Indonesia starting in August. Jakarta earlier proposed the purchase to help narrow its trade surplus and secure lower US tariffs. Finally, the front-month Sep/Oct and 6-month Sep/Mar’26 spreads are at $1.07/bbl and $2.90/bbl, respectively.

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Refinery Margins Report

– In the week ending 11 July, refinery margins declined slightly across all tenors, except for Q1’26 for Asian refineries, which increased by 0.13.

– On a month-on-month basis, all margins have increased, with M1 in Europe and the US showing the largest rises of 2.33 and 2.96, respectively.

– Despite M2 and M3 being slightly higher than M1 on the Asian refinery forward curve, the rest of the curve remains in contango. The higher M2/M3 margins are driven by stronger M2 levels across the cracks, with MOPJ, kerosene, gasoil, and 380 Dubai cracks priced higher over the past month. The M2 92 Dubai crack was priced higher on 11 July.

– The European refinery forward curve similarly showed a higher-priced M2, with prices further along the curve also elevated, as M9 through M12 traded above M8. Both M2 and Q4’25 saw higher prices across naphtha cracks.

– The US refinery forward curve is in contango from M1 through M7, but prices jump at M8 and remain higher than M7 through to M12.

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ETFs Report

Click below to explore our ETFs report, providing a detailed analysis of price movements, trading volume, and counterparty shifts in ETF underlyings, along with open interest trends in the options market. Featured funds include USO, SCO, UCO, KOLD, BOIL, and UNG. For each ETF, we offer a comprehensive breakdown of price trends, volume, open interest, and key market participants.

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