News A Key Mover For Oil

 | Apr 17, 2014 07:09AM ET

The Oil markets are known for their swings up and down, especially in times of crises and times of recession. The most frequent market mover though, is the oil inventory data released by the Energy Information Administration (EIA), more commonly referred to as the data-gathering arm of the Department of Energy in the USA. This price mover has the ability to push oil prices by a few dollars, however, last night it didn’t.

The general consensus for oil movements is that a surplus leads to a drop in prices for oil when it comes to the US crude oil reserves and vice versa when there is a deficit in reserves. It’s basic at the most simple understanding level, but markets operate on a supply and demand basis when it comes to extremely liquid commodities such as oil.

What happened last night though, defied many expectations and a little bit of belief.

US crude inventories come in positive at 10 million barrels compared to a forecast of just 2 million - a very strong reading for oil, as domestic production hit its highest point in 26 years.

Obviously, many would expect a decline in oil prices, with such a surge in supply and an increase in oil inventories. However, the market reaction was the opposite. Instead, we saw oil prices lift surprisingly, as front page news played a bigger impact.