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Hedge funds throw record bets on rising gasoline as summer nears
Vehicles wait in line for gas at a Twice Daily gas station on Franklin Road in Brentwood, Tennessee September 17, 2016. u00e2u20acu201d Reuters pi

NEW YORK, April 30 — Money managers are going all in on gasoline.

Hedge funds boosted bets on rising gasoline prices to the highest on record. That’s as futures for the motor fuel jumped to the highest since August amid robust demand and inventories hovering near their lowest since January.

"We are heading into the driving season and the market has tightened rather nicely,” said Michael Lynch, president of Strategic Energy & Economic Research in Winchester, Massachusetts. "People are gambling that the strong economy will yield a very strong driving season and that may stress out the refining sector.”

Global demand proves solid, with Goldman Sachs Group Inc saying oil’s rally to three-year highs will spur fuel demand as reserves of Middle East petrodollars are reinvested overseas and stimulate the global economy. Gasoline products supplied, a measure of demand, hit a record-high earlier this month, according to US government data.

Money managers increased their net-long position on benchmark US gasoline by 14 per cent to 111,397 futures and options, during the week ended April 24, according to the US Commodity Futures Trading Commission. That’s the highest on record in data going back to 2006. Longs climbed 14 per cent, while shorts jumped 30 per cent.

US crude exports have jumped above two million barrels a day to a record high and gasoline exports also climbed, according to Energy Information Administration data.

Demand narrative

"There is a compelling demand narrative,” said John Kilduff, a partner at Again Capital LLC, a New York-based hedge fund. The jump in crude exports to above two million barrels a day "is notable.”

As for crude prices, West Texas Intermediate oil is sitting just above US$68 (RM266) a barrel as geopolitical tensions swirl, with focus on whether US President Donald Trump will impose sanctions on Iran come May 12, which could limit the producer’s output and boost crude prices.

Hedge funds reduced their WTI net-long position — the difference between bets on a price increase and wagers on a drop — by 2.1 per cent to 433,118 futures and options. Longs fell 1.5 per cent and shorts increased 7.2 per cent.

"The fact that you would see some consolidation in the long positions makes sense,” said Tamar Essner, an analyst at Nasdaq Inc in New York. "But the fact that you didn’t see too much also makes sense, as no one wants to be short going into the May 12 deadline on Iran.”

Other positions

The Brent net-long position slipped 1.2 per cent to 612,486 contracts, weekly ICE Futures Europe data showed. The net-bullish position on diesel rose 12 per cent. — Bloomberg

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