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European Oil Markets
16JUL

Funds cut crude length into the rally

2 min read
09:39UTC

The CFTC's delayed positioning data caught money managers trimming WTI net length 23% in the week to 7 July, even as Brent pushed toward multi-week highs.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

Positioning cut into the rally leaves the move dependent on fresh buying, not trapped shorts covering.

The US Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), the federal regulator that publishes weekly futures positioning, released a delayed Commitments of Traders (COT) report on 10 July showing NYMEX West Texas Intermediate (WTI) managed money net long down to +64,041 contracts in the week to 7 July, a 23% cut from +82,872 a fortnight earlier 1. Managed money is the speculative fund category that usually amplifies oil rallies, so a cut into a rising market is the opposite of the crowd chasing price.

Gasoline positioning barely moved. RBOB managed money net long held at +71,249 against +71,095 , so the deleveraging sat in crude alone rather than across the petroleum complex. Funds trimmed length into the 5 July OPEC+ August output hike , reading the cartel's added barrels as a supply signal rather than building for a Hormuz squeeze.

The book that ran into the 8 July risk reassertion and the following week's spike was already trimmed. A rally carried on a lighter book has less short-covering fuel behind it if the catalyst fades, and at +64,041 net long WTI positioning is still historically light. The asymmetry that leaves is clear: a second leg higher needs fresh money entering, not trapped shorts scrambling to cover.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Large investment funds use futures contracts to bet on whether oil prices will rise or fall. The CFTC, a US regulator, publishes a weekly report showing how those bets are positioned. This report came out late and showed that funds had cut their bets on rising US crude oil (WTI) prices by almost a quarter in the two weeks before 7 July. That happened because OPEC+, the group of oil-producing nations, had just confirmed it would keep pumping more oil, which usually pushes prices down. Their bets on rising petrol (RBOB gasoline) prices barely changed, showing the pullback was specific to crude, not petrol.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

The 23% cut traces to a specific calendar collision: the CFTC's report covers the week to 7 July, meaning it captures fund behaviour after the 5 July OPEC+ vote confirmed a fourth consecutive supply hike but before the 8 July Hormuz reassertion repriced the risk premium. Funds were positioning for OPEC+'s stated growth path, not against a chokepoint closure that had not yet reasserted itself.

The RBOB-WTI divergence has a separate structural cause: gasoline demand and refining margins sit on their own seasonal driving-season support , insulated from the crude-specific OPEC+ supply calculus that drove the WTI unwind.

What could happen next?
  • Meaning

    The fund book that entered the 8-13 July Hormuz shock was already 23% lighter on WTI length than two weeks earlier, meaning the current rally is not yet fund-driven length-chasing.

  • Consequence

    A lighter starting book leaves more room for fresh fund buying if the Hormuz premium persists, which would amplify rather than cap further price gains.

First Reported In

Update #16 · Brent hit $79; the structure said no

CFTC· 13 Jul 2026
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Different Perspectives
Indian refiners
Indian refiners
Indian refiners kept lifting discounted Urals as the India/Baltic price split widened past $9-10 a barrel, a gap that only grows as GL X1's Iranian wind-down cuts an alternative discounted grade off the market by 17 July. Cheaper Russian feedstock is being locked in while it lasts.
Chinese refiners
Chinese refiners
Chinese refiners gain leverage as the Urals-Brent discount widens, since Beijing's state buyers already source discounted Russian barrels near the fiscal floor unaffected by Western insurance costs. A wider discount, if it holds past 23 July, lets them lock in cheaper term contracts regardless of the cap's outcome.
US money managers (CFTC-tracked)
US money managers (CFTC-tracked)
Managed money trimmed WTI net length into the rally, positioning that reflects doubt the Hormuz premium survives without freight or war-risk confirmation. The Brent-WTI spread widening almost entirely on the Brent leg supports that scepticism about a broad-based repricing.
OPEC+ (Saudi-led subgroup)
OPEC+ (Saudi-led subgroup)
Saudi Arabia is defending market share through a fourth straight 188kbd August hike even as OPEC's own July MOMR cut 2026 demand growth for the fourth consecutive month. At a $108-111 fiscal breakeven, every added barrel costs Riyadh revenue it cannot recoup, so the hike reads as a positioning signal, not a demand bet.
Greek shipping registries
Greek shipping registries
Greece, backed by Cyprus and Malta, is pushing a three-month cap-freeze compromise against the Commission's freeze to January 2027 ahead of the 23 July vote. Athens' and Valletta's combined tanker registrations mean a shorter review gives their insurers more frequent chances to reprice risk on Russian cargoes.
Russia (Deputy PM Alexander Novak)
Russia (Deputy PM Alexander Novak)
Novak extended the diesel export restriction to producers on 8 July, the first producer-binding curb of the war, protecting the domestic pump price ahead of any refinery repair timeline. Urals still trades below Russia's $59 budget floor even as Brent gained, so the ban trades export revenue for fiscal stability at home.