The benchmark diesel price used for most fuel surcharges rose Monday for the fifth time in six weeks, and it seems that market conditions for distillates–which includes diesel–are the only oil market fundamentals garnering attention these days.
The Department of Energy/Energy Information Administration average weekly retail price rose 1.9 cents/gallon to $3.758/g, effective Monday and published Tuesday. That stretch of five up, one down in the last six weeks has added 30.7 cts/g to the benchmark.
Most of the chatter on broad oil market moves has been looking to geopolitics as reasons for movement. But when it turns to fundamentals, it is the diesel market that has been the most important factor.
That the oil markets are being led by diesel can be seen in one basic comparison.
Since the start of last month, the price of Brent on the CME commodity exchange has risen 7%, to a settlement Monday of $69.21 from a starting point of $64.63/barrel on June 2.
During that same period, ultra low sulfur diesel on CME climbed to a settlement Monday of $2.3898/g from $2.0445/g, an increase of 16.9%.
The widening of diesel to crude continued Tuesday. At approximately 11 a.m., ULSD was up about 0.75% while Brent crude was down about 0.16%.
The broader market economics for crude still remains heavily weighted toward bearish. The OPEC+ group continues to add supply into the market, voting to approve higher output in August when it met earlier this month.
It has been setting that “more is better” policy for several months when it gathers for its remote meetings. The OPEC+ more than 2-million barrel/day cutback in production that dates back to 2023 is expected to be fully unwound by September, far earlier than expected.
The monthly production estimate from S&P Global Commodity Insights, which had not been showing large increases in OPEC+ output in recent months despite the changes in the group’s production policies, finally did so in its estimate of OPEC+ output in June. It was up about 600,000 b/d, a huge one-month increase.
And the monthly estimate of the International Energy Agency released late last week still showed an overall global petroleum market where new supply is outstripping new demand.