The US trucking industry appears poised for a rebound, which threatens to tighten a diesel market already contending with some of the lowest stockpiles in more than two decades.
(Bloomberg) — The US trucking industry appears poised for a rebound, which threatens to tighten a diesel market already contending with some of the lowest stockpiles in more than two decades.
Domestic freight demand is set to rise because retailers have whittled down most of their excess inventory, according to a J.B. Hunt Transport Services Inc. executive. Construction projects fostered by President Joe Biden’s stimulus programs also are boosting use of diesel-powered truck fleets, said Craig Fuller, CEO of data and price-reporting company FreightWaves Inc. That means diesel consumption is set to rise at a time when domestic fuel stockpiles are languishing at the second-lowest seasonal levels since 2000.
At risk are farmers who need diesel to harvest crops and homeowners who rely on its sister fuel, heating oil, to get through the winter. Diesel is so deeply embedded within manufacturing and transportation that its cost permeates the supply chain, and a price squeeze would almost certainly point to broader inflationary pressures in everything from groceries to electronics.
Diesel futures already are trading near the highest level since January in New York, and the premium that near-term supplies are fetching relative to deliveries later this year is discouraging arbitrageurs from stowing fuel in storage tanks. At the retail level, diesel is commanding 30% more than the five-year average, according to data from auto club AAA.
Bob Costello, chief economist at industry association American Trucking Association, foresees “small improvements” in freight demand. Meanwhile, government analysts at the Energy Information Administration on Tuesday lifted their full-year 2023 forecast for distillates consumption — the category that includes diesel and heating oil — to 3.93 million barrels a day.
Diesel-supply tightness in the US compounds a looming shortage around the world. The OPEC alliance’s decision to extend output limits is forcing refiners to use different types of crude, a switch that JPMorgan Chase & Co. estimates is cutting fuel yields by as much as 1 million barrels a day. Add to that the fact that Russia is curbing diesel exports and the worldwide supply picture looks grim.
–With assistance from Augusta Saraiva and Thomas Black.
(Updates with J.B. Hunt comment in second paragraph.)
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