|

The commodities feed: Israel responds, Oil sells off

Oil prices sold off this morning following Israel’s response to Iran’s recent missile attack. The measured and targeted response from Israel has increased hopes of de-escalation.

Energy – Oil sells off following Israel response

Oil prices opened this morning lower with ICE Brent trading more than 4% lower at the time of writing, taking the market back below $73/bbl. This weakness comes despite Israel finally responding over the weekend to Iran’s recent missile attack. However, Israel’s response appears to have been measured with only Iranian air defence and missile production facilities targeted. The concern for the market had been if Israel targeted Iran’s energy or nuclear infrastructure. The more targeted response from Israel leaves the door open for de-escalation and clearly the price action in oil this morning suggests the market is of the same view. While it is still unclear if or how Iran may retaliate, the government has downplayed the damage caused by Israel’s response. The Iranian supreme leader has said that the attack should not be “exaggerated or downplayed”. Clearly, if we do see some de-escalation it would allow fundamentals once again to dictate price direction. And with a surplus market over 2025, this would mean that oil prices are likely to remain under pressure.

The latest positioning data for ICE Brent showed little change in the managed money net long over the last week. Speculators reduced their net long by 1,941 lots to 134,581 lots as of last Tuesday. The lack of movement shows that speculators have been torn between growing geopolitical risks and bearish 2025 fundamentals. As for refined products, speculators remain bearish on middle distillates. The positioning data shows that speculators increased their net short in ICE gasoil by 10,777 lots to 41,786 lots. Similarly, for NYMEX ULSD, the managed money net short increased by 3,826 lots to 26,314 lots. Weak demand, growing Middle Eastern supply and comfortable inventory levels continue to keep pressure on middle distillates.   

European natural gas prices strengthened on Friday. TTF settled more than 3.2% higher on the day taking prices a little over EUR43.5/MWh, the highest year-to-date level. Forecasts for colder weather at the end of this week, a relatively small outage in Norway, along with Middle Eastern tensions, have provided upside to the market. Although with broader markets of the view that we could possibly see some de-escalation in the Middle East following developments over the weekend, gas prices may trade lower today. However, the other factor which is offering support to the market is that last week we saw several days of marginal storage draws, and so storage will start the heating season slightly below where we would have expected it to be. But at more than 95% full these are still very comfortable levels, just not as comfortable as we were initially expecting.

Agriculture – UNICA report higher sugar cane crush

The latest fortnightly report from the UNICA shows that sugar cane crushing in Centre-South Brazil stood at 33.8mt over the first half of October, compared to 32.9mt during the same period last year. The cumulative sugar cane crush for the season as of mid-October rose 2.4% year-on-year to 538.8mt. Meanwhile, sugar production rose by 8% YoY to 2.4mt over the first half of October. Around 47.3% of cane was allocated to sugar production in the fortnight, lower than the 48.1% allocated for sugar production in the same period last year. Cumulative sugar output so far this season is 35.6mt, up 1.9% YoY.

France’s Agriculture Ministry said that around 25% of the corn crop was harvested as of 21 October, well below the five-year average of 69%. The Ministry reported that 75% of the corn was rated in good to very good condition, down from 78% in the previous week and 83% a year earlier. Meanwhile, about 21% of the French soft wheat was planted for the above-mentioned period, compared with a five-year average of 47%.

The latest CFTC data show that money managers increased their net short position in CBOT soybeans by 19,233 lots to 59,574 lots as of 22 October. The move was dominated by fresh shorts with the gross short position increasing by 18,631 lots to 152,610 lots. Similarly, speculators increased their bearish bets in wheat by 2,902 lots over the last week, leaving them with a net short position of 28,915 lots. The net speculative short position in CBOT corn fell by 15,489 lots to 71,499 lots over the reporting week. Strong US corn export sales data last week may drive further short covering.

Read the original analysis: The commodities feed: Israel responds, Oil sells off

Author

ING Global Economics Team

ING Global Economics Team

ING Economic and Financial Analysis

From Trump to trade, FX to Brexit, ING’s global economists have it covered. Go to ING.com/THINK to stay a step ahead.

More from ING Global Economics Team
Share:

Editor's Picks

EUR/USD weakens to near 1.1900 as traders eye US data

EUR/USD eases to near 1.1900 in Tuesday's European trading hours, snapping the two-day winning streak. Markets turn cautious, lifting the haven demand for the US Dollar ahead of the release of key US economic data, including Retail Sales and ADP Employment Change 4-week average.

GBP/USD stays in the red below 1.3700 on renewed USD demand

GBP/USD trades on a weaker note below 1.3700 in the European session on Tuesday. The pair faces challenges due to renewed US Dollar demand, UK political risks and rising expectations of a March Bank of England rate cut. The immediate focus is now on the US Retail Sales data. 

Gold sticks to modest losses above $5,000 ahead of US data

Gold sticks to modest intraday losses through the first half of the European session, though it holds comfortably above the $5,000 psychological mark and the daily swing low. The outcome of Japan's snap election on Sunday removes political uncertainty, which along with signs of easing tensions in the Middle East, remains supportive of the upbeat market mood. This turns out to be a key factor exerting downward pressure on the safe-haven precious metal.

Bitcoin Cash trades lower, risks dead-cat bounce amid bearish signals

Bitcoin Cash trades in the red below $522 at the time of writing on Tuesday, after multiple rejections at key resistance. BCH’s derivatives and on-chain indicators point to growing bearish sentiment and raise the risk of a dead-cat bounce toward lower support levels.

Follow the money, what USD/JPY in Tokyo is really telling you

Over the past two Tokyo sessions, this has not been a rate story. Not even close. Interest rate differentials have been spectators, not drivers. What has moved USD/JPY in local hours has been flow and flow alone.

Bitcoin Cash trades lower, risks dead-cat bounce amid bearish signals

Bitcoin Cash (BCH) trades in the red below $522 at the time of writing on Tuesday, after multiple rejections at key resistance. BCH’s derivatives and on-chain indicators point to growing bearish sentiment and raise the risk of a dead-cat bounce toward lower support levels.