About The Author

Phil Flynn

Phil Flynn is writer of The Energy Report, a daily market commentary discussing oil, the Middle East, American government, economics, and their effects on the world's energies markets, as well as other commodity markets. Contact Mr. Flynn at (888) 264-5665

Oil is rising but stocks are falling. The UK Economy looks shaky. AI stocks tumble on border concerns about valuations and worries about Fed Policy going forward. Yet for oil it was the report that a Ukraine drone attack hit the crown jewel of Russia’s Black Sea trade the Novorossiysk Port which is Russia’s #1 commercial port causing halted oil exports and a shutdown of the oil pipeline  monopoly.

The attack is not only moving oil but grains and wheat as well as the port handles 30% of Russia’s seaborne exports (oil, grain, coal, fertilizers). This also includes the Sheskharis oil terminal alone which can push 60 million tons of crude a year.   

Economically speaking, Novorossiysk isn’t just another port—it’s Putin’s pressure valve under sanctions. After Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine torpedoed the UN grain deal in July 2023, this place shot to the top—becoming Moscow’s main lifeline for exports. In the 2024–25 season alone, Novorossiysk hurled about 50 million tons of grain onto the world market, filling the gap left by shuttered Black Sea routes.

And oil? That shadow fleet of creaky, uninsured tankers—think a thousand voyages a year, per Windward intel—keeps loading up discounted Urals crude over the G7’s magically disappearing $60 price cap and steaming off to any buyer willing to look the other way. This isn’t just logistics—it’s economic survival, Russian style. Nostrovia!

We should be finding some support as well from the fact that the promised crude oil glut is failing to hit on the US shores and the increased risk to supply out of Russia’s causing another surge up in the diesel crack spread this morning and even turning around the gasoline crack. What are cracks? Call Phil Flynn at 888-264-5665 learn all about them. 

Where is the glut? Not in this week’s Energy Information Administration (EIA) report. Actually, our attention should be on U.S. petroleum demand, which reached an impressive 20.77 million barrels per day last week. So, yes, the headline says U.S. commercial crude inventories (excluding the Strategic Petroleum Reserve) rose by 6.4 million barrels in the last week. Sounds like a build, right?

Let’s not get too carried away. At 427.6 million barrels, we’re still running about 4% below the five-year average for this time of year—hardly screaming “glut” from the rooftops. And how about gasoline? Total motor gasoline inventories fell by 0.9 million barrels, also sitting 4% under the five-year norm. Now, finished gasoline inventories may have edged higher, but blending components slipped—so we’re playing a shell game here, not a sign of overflowing tanks.

Distillate fuel inventories? Down again by 0.6 million barrels and now a hefty 8% below the five-year average. So, with all this talk of oversupply, you have to wonder: where’s the flood of oil everyone keeps promising?

Natural gas is continuing to rise even as we get ready for what may be the last warm up of 2025 before we fall into an arctic blast abyss. The Wall Street Journal points out that the onset of cold weather and record LNG exports have driven natural-gas prices to their highest levels since fuel markets spiked following Russia’s 2022 invasion of Ukraine. The Journal says that this is good news for U.S. drillers, who suffered through a supply glut and some of the lowest prices on record last year. 

Those prices are well above the EIA’s forecast of $3.90 this winter.  The Jornal says that A rush to ship liquefied natural gas, or LNG, to European allies after Russia invaded Ukraine and its energy exports were blacklisted by the West pushed domestic gas supplies into a big deficit that sent prices soaring. Once markets adjusted to the shock, U.S. gas inventories flipped into a surfeit that depressed prices.

Gas producers choked back output and slashed their drilling plans last year in response to low prices, but they have become so efficient that overall production levels barely budged from their record-setting course.

Domestic storage caverns are starting this heating season filled with about 4% more gas than the five-year average, which is similar to last year.

FOX Weather is also keeping the forecasts rolling as natural gas gets ready to navigate weather volatility and projections for what could be the coldest winter in a decade. FOX Weather reports, “After a pre-winter arctic blast set more than 80 record low temperatures across the eastern U.S. earlier this week, a major warmup is on the way, with parts of the Heartland expected to surpass the 80-degree mark by the weekend. More than 80 record low temperatures were set on Tuesday, as a large dip in the jet stream allowed arctic air to spill south into the U.S. some three weeks before meteorological winter.

Over 190 million Americans experienced below average temperatures, which allowed snow to stick across parts of the Southeast. Macon, Georgia dropped to 25 degrees, breaking a 100-year-old record. The long-range temperature outlook from NOAA’s Climate Prediction Center shows most of the eastern U.S. remaining at or above average through mid to late November. Yet looking into December, that could change dramatically going the other direction so get the Fox Weather ap to get prepared.

You should stay tuned to the Fox Business Network Invested in you! Call to get the Phil Flynn wildly popular Daily Trade Levels on all major markets by calling 888-264-5665 or email pflynn@pricegroup.com.

Thanks,

Phil Flynn

Senior Market Analyst & Author of The Energy Report

Contributor to FOX Business Network

2918 S. Wentworth Ave. FL 1, Chicago, Illinois 60616

312 264 4364 (Direct)  |  888 264 5665 (Direct)  |  800 769 7021 (Main)  |  312 264 4303 (Fax)

www.pricegroup.com

Please do not leave any instructions for orders in your message, as we cannot execute instructions left through email or voicemail. Orders must be entered via direct verbal communication with a representative of our firm. We cannot be held responsible for orders left in any other manner.  PAST RESULTS ARE NOT NECESSARILY INDICATIVE OF FUTURE RESULTS. Investing in futures can involve substantial risk & is not for everyone. Trading foreign exchange also involves a high degree of risk. The leverage created by trading on margin can work against you as well as for you, and losses can exceed your entire investment. Before opening an account and trading, you should seek advice from your advisors as appropriate to ensure that you understand the risks and can withstand the losses. Member NIBA, NFA.

Questions? Ask Phil Flynn today at 312-264-4364        
Tagged with: