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Iran Conflict 2026
9JUL

CFTC data shows WTI still net short

3 min read
12:10UTC

CFTC positioning data for the week to 2 June showed NYMEX WTI managed money still net short at -26,694 contracts, confirming the Monday rally was short-covering rather than fresh long conviction.

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Key takeaway

Managed money still net short means the rally squeezed out bears without building a long base.

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.

Deep Analysis

In plain English

Every Friday, a US regulator called the CFTC (Commodity Futures Trading Commission) publishes a report showing how financial traders, mainly hedge funds, banks, and other speculators, are positioned in oil futures markets. This report, called the Commitments of Traders, tells you whether professional money is betting that oil prices will rise or fall. For the week ending 2 June, the data showed that managed money held far more bets on oil prices falling than rising in US crude (WTI): 32,732 short contracts (bets on falling prices) against just 6,038 long contracts. This mattered on Monday 8 June: when news of an Iran-Israel missile exchange arrived, those short-sellers had to rush to buy contracts to close their losing bets, amplifying the price jump.

What could happen next?
  • Consequence

    The 71% reduction in legacy non-commercial net short from -27,232 to -7,851 suggests this category's covering cycle is nearly complete; the next directional driver will require fresh managed-money conviction rather than short-covering mechanics.

  • Risk

    If the Friday 12 June CFTC print shows managed money rebuilding short positions after the Monday squeeze, the Monday rally will have provided only a temporary floor above $95 Brent.

First Reported In

Update #6 · OPEC's quota is fiction at a 37-year low

CFTC· 8 Jun 2026
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