Oil Prices Aren’t Gaining Support — It’s Easy To See Why

 | Jul 20, 2017 01:29AM ET

Despite US oil stocks falling 7.6 million barrels, the biggest drop since September, a recent Financial Times article reports, quoting US Energy Information Administration data, that the oil price is struggling to get back to $48 per barrel, let alone the heady heights above $50 it achieved in May.

US refineries are running flat out to meet summer demand, drawing down on US stocks — but still, the price is not responding.

Meanwhile US exports are booming. Rather than being constrained by OPEC cuts, global production is rising. Ironically, even Saudi Arabia is pumping above its target, reporting to the cartel that last month it raised output to 10.7 millions barrels per day, a 190,000 b/d increase on the previous month and 12,000 b/d above its own target.

The Kingdom claims it needed to increase output to meet peak electricity-generating demand experienced during the summer months, but the Saudi increase contributed to total OPEC overproduction of 393,500 b/d from last month, according to the Financial Times.