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WTI Crude Slips as EIA Data Offsets U.S. Production Freeze-Offs

U.S. crude oil futures reversed early gains on Wednesday, turning lower after Energy Information Administration data revealed rising gasoline stocks and a weather-induced slump in demand. While a severe cold snap triggered a significant drop in domestic production, the supply contraction failed to offset bearish signals from the refined products market.

West Texas Intermediate (WTI) struggled to maintain momentum on Wednesday, retreating from an early peak of $64.17/bbl. By 11 a.m. ET, the March WTI contract shed 10 cents to trade at $63.11/bbl, while the April contract saw a similar decline. Conversely, Brent crude maintained its gains, with the April contract rising 31 cents to $67.64/bbl. Refined products remained volatile, with gasoline futures strengthening while diesel contracts traded mixed.

Supply Disruptions and Demand Shifts

The latest EIA report detailed a significant impact from recent winter storms. U.S. oil production fell by 481,000 barrels per day to 13.215 million b/d as freezing temperatures forced wellhead shutdowns in several producing regions. This disruption contributed to a 3.5 million-barrel drop in crude inventories, which now sit 4% below the five-year average. However, the market focused on a 700,000-barrel increase in gasoline stocks and a sharp decline in motor fuel demand.

The distillate market faced its own pressures as extreme cold drove heating demand. Distillate holdings dropped by 5.6 million barrels last week, roughly 2% below the five-year average. According to the agency, the surge in demand was partly fueled by power plants switching to diesel due to natural gas supply constraints.

    • Gasoline demand fell by nearly 600,000 b/d to 8.153 million b/d.
    • Distillate products supplied to the market rose by 242,000 b/d.
  • Refinery utilization remained relatively stable, dipping only 0.5% to 90.5%.
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