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European Oil Markets
16JUL

Longs rebuilt into an 8-week low

5 min read
09:39UTC

The CFTC snapshot to Tuesday 9 June caught money managers net long on both crude legs days before Brent broke 4% to $85.80 on Friday 12 June, leaving the rebuilt book trapped at the low rather than flushed.

EconomicDeveloping
Key takeaway

A freshly-rebuilt long book sits trapped below $87, with the forced deleveraging not yet printed in the data.

The Commodity Futures Trading Commission (CFTC), the US futures regulator, published its disaggregated Commitments of Traders report for the week to Tuesday 9 June, showing money managers flipped to a dual crude net-long for the first time since mid-May. WTI managed money swung 121,419 contracts to +94,725 (213,483 long against 118,758 short), reversing the -26,694 net short of the prior week 1. ICE Brent Last Day, the main CFTC-reportable Brent positioning vehicle, flipped to +7,755 net long from the -57,280 short that sat under the $92.69 settlement of 11 June , a reversal of roughly 65,000 contracts. The product book turned with it: RBOB +64,125 and ULSD +9,507, monetising the distillate-deficit thesis across the barrel.

Then the market fell out of bed. Brent broke more than 4% on Friday 12 June to an intraday $85.80/bbl, settling $87.33, an 8-week low 2. The COT snapshot closes on Tuesday 9 June; the break came on Friday 12 June, three sessions after the cutoff, so the timing is what traps the book. So the freshly-built length is still on the screen at the low, and the deleveraging it implies has not printed. That length was bought into the 8 June squeeze top at $97.82 , not into fresh weakness, which puts the average entry $5 to $6 above where the book now sits.

The flat-price fall tracks Iran-deal optimism, the sister topic's story; the desk's trade is the P&L, not the headline. Stop-loss exposure runs on a crowded long bought above the screen, so if the unsigned Iran deal slips even 48 hours the bid that drove $86.50 reverses and the same week's sanctions risk fires into a position with nowhere to hide. The pattern has repeated through this crisis: leveraged length rebuilt at each local top and carried out, from +172,580 WTI before the 23 May MOU to +94,725 now. The 20 June report will carry the flush; until then the positioning read is mechanically stale.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Every week, a US regulator called the CFTC publishes a report showing which way large financial traders, called "managed money" or hedge funds, have placed their bets on oil prices. When these traders all bet prices will rise (a "net long"), and then prices fall sharply instead, the traders are forced to sell their positions quickly to cut losses. That selling pressure pushes prices down further, which forces more selling, creating a cascade. Here, the weekly report published on 13 June showed that in the previous week, traders had all switched from betting prices would fall to betting they would rise, on both the main oil price benchmarks used in London and New York. But the very next trading day, 12 June, the oil price fell more than 4%, catching all those newly placed bets on the wrong side. The traders who built those bets near the recent high of $97.82 are now sitting on significant losses. The question is whether they exit en masse (pushing prices lower still) or hold on because the underlying supply situation remains tight.

Deep Analysis
Root Causes

Three structural causes converge. First, the COT reporting lag amplifies the whipsaw. The CFTC prints positions as of the prior Tuesday; by the time Friday's data shows the rebuilt long, market participants are already positioned for the following week's move. The 9 June long was built into a price level ($92-97 range) that the 12 June session invalidated before the data was even public.

Second, the dual nature of the long (both WTI and Brent simultaneously net-long after both were short) leaves no hedging offset. In the typical configuration, a Brent long and WTI short (as seen after the 26 May print, ) provides cross-hedge protection. The dual long has no such buffer; a flat-price fall hurts both legs in full.

Third, the RBOB position (+64,125 contracts, the largest product leg) was built on a separate narrative from the crude: US summer driving demand. That thesis did not collapse with Brent. The product long sitting atop a falling crude base creates a crack-compression risk that compounds the crude book's stop-loss exposure.

What could happen next?
  • Risk

    Stop-loss cascade on 186,000+ WTI long contracts risks accelerating Brent toward the EIA's $79 2027 base case ahead of schedule if no physical demand catalyst interrupts the flush before the 20 June COT print.

    Immediate · Assessed
  • Opportunity

    Refiners with flexible crude slates can exploit the $12 Brent dip from the squeeze top to lock in cheap feedstock cover, narrowing crude costs while product cracks remain supported by the ARA distillate deficit.

    Short term · Assessed
  • Risk

    The RBOB product long (+64,125 contracts) sits above a falling crude base; if summer US driving demand disappoints relative to the thesis that built the position, a simultaneous crude and product flush would compress crack spreads sharply.

    Short term · Suggested
First Reported In

Update #8 · Longs rebuilt into an 8-week Brent low

CFTC· 15 Jun 2026
Read original
Causes and effects
This Event
Longs rebuilt into an 8-week low
The positioning cutoff precedes the break, so the deleveraging is unprinted and the speculative long book is fully exposed into an asymmetric sanctions week.
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