The Commodities Feed: Easing trade tensions provides a boost to markets

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Following the sanction-driven rally in oil late last week, the market got another boost from the improved tone in trade talks between the US and China. Over the weekend, indications were that the truce would be extended. US Treasury Secretary Scott Bessent said that the additional100% tariff threat is “effectively off the table,” China is expected to delay export controls on rare earths. The announcement of these controls essentially triggered the latest escalation in trade tensions.

The latest positioning data shows that speculators continued to cut their net long in ICE Brent, selling 57,085 lots over the last reporting week to leave them with a net long of just 52,521 lots as of last Tuesday. This was driven largely by fresh shorts entering the market. As of last Tuesday, speculators held the largest gross long on record, just shy of 198k lots. Clearly, a large segment of the market was positioned on the wrong side ahead of the US announcement on Russian sanctions. It drove lots of shorts to run in and cover their positions.

Meanwhile, the Brent-Dubai spread remains under pressure amid the uncertainty over Russian oil trade following US sanctions. Indian refiners have reportedly been actively seeking alternative crude oil grades, largely from the Middle East. The spread has collapsed in recent days amid strength in the Middle East market.

Turning to the refined products market, in the longer term Dangote plans to double the capacity of its Nigerian refinery. The 650k b/d refinery is expected to increase capacity to 700k b/d next year, then to 1.4m b/d over a three-year period. This will be a further pain for European refiners, who ship gasoline into West Africa. Volumes have already come under pressure in recent years due to the ramp-up of the Dangote refinery.