The CFTC (Commodity Futures Trading Commission), the US derivatives regulator, released Commitments of Traders data for the week to 2 June showing NYMEX West Texas Intermediate managed money still net short at -26,694 contracts 1. The breakdown is lopsided: 6,038 longs against 32,732 shorts. The legacy non-commercial net short narrowed to -7,851 from -27,232, so positioning was unwinding into the OPEC weekend but had not flipped long.
The data settles which kind of rally Monday's gap was. Shorts covered; longs did not pile in. A market that jumps while managed money stays net short is squeezing out bearish bets, not building bullish ones. That distinction is invisible on a price screen and decisive for what happens next, because a covering move has no accumulated length to absorb the first wave of profit-taking.
The -26,694 read confirms the unwind the prior briefing already noted was complete . Each Brent and WTI spike this quarter has been positioning-led rather than barrel-led, with the flat price repeatedly mistaking covering for conviction. One honest limit holds: this CFTC dataset carries NYMEX contracts only, so the ICE Brent managed-money position for the same week is unconfirmed, and the WTI read is the single verified positioning signal available.
