By Dan Molinski


U.S. commercial inventories of crude oil and gasoline both rose a bit more than expected last week, according to data released Wednesday by the Energy Information Administration.

Benchmark U.S. oil prices that were slightly lower before the report was released turned slightly higher afterward. The Nymex front-month crude contract for March delivery was recently up 0.2% at $80.29 a barrel.

Commercial crude-oil stockpiles increased by 533,000 barrels to 448.5 million barrels, and remain 3% above the five-year average, the EIA said. Analysts surveyed by The Wall Street Journal had predicted crude stockpiles would rise by 100,000 barrels from the prior week.

Oil stored at Cushing, Okla., the delivery point for U.S. stocks, increased by 4.3 million barrels from the previous week, to 35.7 million barrels, the EIA said in its weekly report.

U.S. crude-oil production was unchanged from the previous week at 12.2 million barrels a day, according to the EIA.

Gasoline stockpiles climbed by 1.8 million barrels to 232 million barrels, compared with analysts' expectations of a 1 million-barrel increase.

Distillate stocks, which are mostly diesel fuel, fell by 507,000 barrels to 115.3 million barrels, and remain about 20% below the five-year average, the EIA said. Analysts had forecast distillates inventories would fall by 1 million barrels from the previous week.

The refining capacity utilization rate rose by 0.8 percentage point from the previous week, to 86.1%. Analysts were forecasting a larger, 1.4-percentage-point increase from the week prior.


 
U.S. oil inventories for the week ended Jan. 20: 
 
               Crude  Gasoline    Distillates  Refinery Use 
EIA data:       +0.5     +1.8         -0.5        +0.8 
Forecast:       +0.1     +1.0         -1.0        +1.4 
 
 
 

Note: Numbers in millions of barrels, with the exception of refinery use, which is in percentage points.


Write to Dan Molinski at dan.molinski@wsj.com


(END) Dow Jones Newswires

01-25-23 1100ET