There's no doubt, however, that yesterday's U.S. Energy Department inventory report was bullish. Oil supplies fell by 5.4 million barrels last week amid analysts' expectations of a 900,000 barrel increase.
U.S. oil refineries were operating at 87.9% of capacity last week, a shade higher than insiders' expectations. Gasoline production ramped up while distillate fuel production, including diesel and fuel oils, decreased as the summer refining pattern took hold.
Gasoline inventories fell 800,000 barrels last week, surprising analysts who had forecast a half-million barrel increase. Distillate fuel inventories increased by 700,000 barrels, less than Street expectations.
Crude's recent spike has been tied to strong demand for diesel fuel in China. Beijing has been buying diesel oil in preparation for this summer's Olympic Games. Additionally, fuel is being ordered to replace nearly depleted coal stocks for power generation. Earthquake-ravaged areas of the country, too, have been forced to rely upon diesel generators for power, further adding to demand.
Downstream profits for oil refiners held steady at 8.9% this week. That translates to $12 per barrel at current prices. Crude oil rose 8.6% this week, while unleaded blendstock gasoline gained 8.4%. Heating oil prices were up 9.1%.

These hikes were mirrored by gains in petroleum complex ETFs. The United States Oil Fund (AMEX: USO) ticked up 8.1% to $108.31. The United States Gasoline Fund (AMEX: UGA) was boosted 7.6% to $63.25 and the United States Heating Oil Fund (AMEX: UHN) surged 8.8% to $64.16.
On the alternative fuel front, the ethanol corn crush slipped 14 cents per bushel to 83 cents this week.

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This article has 7 comments:
- oil myth
- 5 Comments
May 22 10:01 PMTo summarize, I guess the oil rally is over and there are strong downward pressures for commodities going forward.
- dan957
- 1 Comment
May 23 02:12 AMGas also produces less polution, and costs about $4000 to install, we almost have dollar parity so we can assume prices should be simular. Do US gas pums include LPG? If so, how many have it? More than half the Bowsers have had LPG in australia over the last 10 years.
Finally, Oil will probably continue to go up in price since inventories are declining, but if you start to impliment an alternative to oil, then the price will start to go down as demand subsides.
Regs
Dan
- fxtrader07
- 618 Comments
May 23 07:16 AMpainful as it may be, gasoline will probably have to hit $8 a gallone before something will really change. over here in europe we pay 8-9$/gallone and even we have only started changing a couple of years ago and are wery far from really having accomplished something significant
- Elliot Miller
- 55 Comments
May 23 11:33 AMThe hard fact is that speculation plays a small role only where there is significant increasing demand and only marginally increasing supply at best. The IEA's view that production will not meet world demand shows the cause of the problem, and thrash about as they may our brilliant elected officials cannot repeal the laws of supply and demand. Look at the brilliant job they did with ethanol.
- 2Rae
- 1 Comment
May 23 02:37 PM- msgtb
- 48 Comments
May 23 03:47 PM- humberto
- 1 Comment
Jun 03 07:52 PMthe petroleun contries are getting Billion of Dollars and Investing on USA,Canada,Japan purchasing and Investing on real state ,Airplanes
contries like Nigeria ,Malasya ,Indonesia,Lybia,Ecuad... Oil producers are going negative on investing on infraestructure and own
local people and food prices will go high on basic products and will get riots and goverments will fail to provide stability and peace.
the Chinese will get more Diesel stock and get prices up
India will get more need of oils , Venezuela will not export more oil on october price will go very high Ecuador economy will colaps .
Argetina ,Chile, peru, Paraguay,Uruguay will feel the econmic impact
and their economies will change .