Trade with Conviction

Sparta

In-depth analysis of current trends and future expectations for different segments of the oil market, with a focus on understanding both the supply and demand dynamics at play.

  1. 2 DAYS AGO

    Episode 85: Trump blinks on Iran. The trade is in the spreads, not the headline

    In this emergency episode of the Trade with Conviction podcast, host Felipe is joined by analysts June and Neil to break down one of the most volatile weeks in recent oil market history. Trump's 48-hour ultimatum to Iran, Monday's shock de-escalation, suspicious pre-announcement trading in oil, bonds and equities, drone attacks across Saudi Arabia and Kuwait, and a fire at Valero Port Arthur's diesel hydrotreater — the team cuts through the noise and lands on a clear conclusion: crude futures are being managed at $100, but the physical product market isn't buying it. They walk through the recovery timeline if Hormuz reopens, explain why the real trade is in deferred cracks and time spreads, and set out exactly what traders should be watching next. Chapters:  (00:53) Iran, Trump and the 48-hour ultimatum Neil walks through the weekend's escalation — Trump's threat to bomb Iranian power plants, Iran's counter-escalation, and how fears over GCC desalination infrastructure brought the region to the edge. (04:33) The pre-announcement anomaly Five minutes before Trump's post, oil, bonds and equities all moved in the same direction. Felipe breaks down the unusual volume spike and why it's creating a growing mistrust in market integrity. (07:45) Tuesday: Iran retaliates and Valero Port Arthur catches fire June covers the morning's events — drone attacks intercepted over Saudi Arabia, power outages in Kuwait, sirens in Bahrain, and an unplanned explosion at the diesel hydrotreater of one of the US's top 10 refineries. (09:48) Three scenarios: de-escalation, price suppression or chaos? The team stress-tests what Monday's announcement actually means. Neil's base case: crude futures are being managed at $100, but the product supply crunch hasn't gone anywhere. (20:15) If Hormuz opens tonight, we're already in June Neil and June walk through every link in the recovery chain — vessel ballasting, oil field restarts, AG refinery force majeures, port congestion, Asian restocking. The maths lands on three to six months before anything normalises. (29:16) The trade: time spreads and cracks, not flat price Flat price is being capped. Everything else isn't. Felipe and Neil make the case for rolling backwardation and deferred cracks as the cleaner, lower-noise trade while headlines keep crude choppy.

    38 min
  2. 19 MAR

    Episode 84: South Pars hit. Escalation was fast. What happens to oil from here?

    The war in the Middle East escalated again. Israel struck South Pars. Iran responded with attacks on Ras Laffan and Saudi refineries. And as this episode was recorded, Reuters confirmed Yambu had stopped loading oil. Flat price pushed above $115. WTI collapsed to a $20 discount to Brent as export ban fears gripped the market. TC14 and TC15 have more than doubled since the conflict started. Jet fuel in Europe hit $1,700–$1,800 a tonne, and SAS has already started cancelling routes. Chapters:  (01:00) Headlines: South Pars, Ras Laffan and the escalation spiral Neil sets the scene. Israel hits South Pars, Iran strikes Ras Laffan and Saudi refineries, flat price breaks $115, and Trump tries to rein things in — without much conviction. (03:09) Jones Act and the export ban trade A 60-day waiver on all products lands. The team debates why WTI-Brent blew out to minus $20 anyway — and whether a crude or product export ban is next. (14:50) Gasoline: East-West at historical highs Jorge walks through the TAR collapse, FizzWest hitting new records, and arbs opening into Australia and Indonesia — a signal that East-West may finally be approaching its limit. (22:53) Naphtha: South Pars condensate and demand destruction   The South Pars strike hits naphtha directly through condensate supply. Jorge covers Russian naphtha picking up, Asian steam cracker rationalisations, and where demand destruction shows up first. (29:00) Distillates and jet: Europe is drawing down fast Phil covers Gulf Coast arb economics, the Hogo under political pressure, and why jet at $1,700–$1,800/tonne is already forcing SAS to cancel intra-European routes. (35:34) Crude: WTI at minus $20 and Yambu stops loading Neil unpacks why WTI is now the cheapest crude in the world, fixtures heading to Asia, and — breaking live on the episode — Reuters confirms Yambu has halted oil loading.

    41 min
  3. 12 MAR

    Episode 83: SPR releases vs supply outages: Can governments stop the oil shock?

    This episode focused on how the escalating conflict is moving beyond headline risk and into a full physical market disruption, with tanker attacks, port damage, refinery outages and force majeure declarations reshaping crude and product flows across the Middle East and Asia. The team unpacked why government intervention, including SPR releases and possible demand controls, is only a partial fix, and why the deepest stress is showing up in products rather than crude, especially diesel, jet, gasoline, naphtha and LPG. They also explored the growing strain on Asian refiners and petrochemical players, the knock on effects for freight and arbitrage economics, and why market paralysis and political intervention are making this one of the hardest environments to price and trade. 📚 Chapters (00:40) Headlines, tanker attacks and the SPR response The team opens with the latest escalation in tanker attacks, infrastructure damage and US efforts to contain oil prices, before breaking down why the SPR release may help at the margin but still falls short of plugging the supply gap. (10:14) Petrochemicals and force majeures across Asia Jorge explains how disrupted Middle East crude, LPG and feedstock flows are hitting petrochemical producers in Korea, Japan, India and Southeast Asia, triggering force majeure announcements and forcing run cuts. (12:08) Distillates take the biggest hit James lays out why diesel and jet remain the most stressed products in the barrel, with historic pricing moves, broken East West economics and few obvious solutions for short markets in both Asia and the Atlantic Basin. (16:41) Gasoline, naphtha and LPG reprice fast The discussion shifts to light ends, where East West gasoline and naphtha spreads continue to surge, arbitrage routes are being redrawn, and India’s LPG exposure adds another layer of inflation and demand risk. (21:05) Freight dislocation and the strange crude market The team looks at how tankers are repositioning away from risk, why freight is distorting crude economics, and why physical differentials in the West are not yet reacting as aggressively as the broader market might suggest. (28:12) Fuel oil pressure and tactical trade ideas The episode closes with a look at fuel oil’s role in the wider shortage, how VLSFO is beginning to compete for distillate molecules, and where the team sees the most interesting, if highly tactical, trading opportunities.

    36 min
  4. 9 MAR

    Episode 82: Hormuz stays shut: products, freight and the real market squeeze

    This emergency episode unpacks the market fallout from the continued closure of the Strait of Hormuz and why the real issue is no longer just crude, but the knock on impact across products, refinery runs and freight. The team looks at why SPR releases are unlikely to solve a disruption of this scale, how Asia is absorbing the biggest immediate hit, why gasoline, jet and distillates are becoming the real pressure points, and how freight markets are reacting as trade flows are forced to reroute. Across the discussion, the central takeaway is clear: until the strait reopens, every other market move is really just a consequence of that one bottleneck. 📚 Chapters (00:50) Hormuz remains shut and the disruption spreads Felipe opens with the weekend’s key developments, from Iran’s political signalling to fresh force majeures across Asia, and why the closure of the strait still overwhelms every other market headline. (05:00) Why SPR releases are not a real solution The team breaks down the limits of strategic reserve releases, where the barrels are, how fast they can actually be drawn, and why this is only a temporary buffer rather than a fix. (09:42) Freight starts repricing the crisis Michael explains the sharp moves in tanker forward curves, the impact of SPR expectations on Atlantic basin freight, and why owners are increasingly being pulled toward the strongest loading regions. (20:44) Crude dislocations, Brent structure and the Yanbu escape valve Neil looks at why some physical crude markets are reacting hard while others remain strangely quiet, what that says about refinery behaviour, and how much Yanbu can realistically help. (25:41) Distillates and jet: where the real squeeze begins James and the team dig into diesel and jet pricing, the shifting east-west economics, and why East Asia and Europe could both end up in a tougher spot than the crude market alone suggests. (31:50) Gasoline and naphtha: open arbitrage, weak confidence The conversation turns to gasoline and naphtha, where paper signals say barrels should move east, but real world execution, demand uncertainty and refinery behaviour make the trade far messier.

    41 min
  5. 2 MAR

    Episode 80: Strait of Hormuz disruption: Freight shock, cracks surge, and what traders must watch next

    In this special episode, the team reacts to the sudden escalation in the Middle East following attacks involving Iran, Israel and the US, focusing on the immediate market impact rather than long term forecasts. With shipping through the Strait of Hormuz effectively halted, the discussion centres on whether the market is facing a logistical bottleneck or a genuine supply shock, and how that distinction is driving sharp moves in freight, crude differentials and product cracks. The group breaks down cross commodity reactions across crude, distillates, gasoline, naphtha and fuel oil, assesses the limits of the so called “oil glut” narrative, and outlines the critical signals traders should monitor over the next 24 to 48 hours. Chapters:  Segment 1: What happened and what to watch next (01:19) Strait of Hormuz: Shipping disruption and logistical shock An overview of the effective closure of the Strait of Hormuz, vessels piling up, and why this is initially a logistics crisis rather than an outright supply loss. (02:55) Tanker attacks, war risk insurance, and freight spike Discussion of reported tanker attacks, suspended war risk cover, surging AG freight rates, and the implications for global ton miles. Segment 2: Oil market impacts and pricing signals (06:10) Crude reaction: Dubai, Brent premiums, and arb dislocations How Brent Dubai EFS, Dubai premiums and global crude arbs are reacting, and why traditional arbitrage signals may not function in the near term. (06:55) Distillates and jet: East West spreads and regrade strength Why jet and diesel cracks are rallying, the significance of AG supply risk, and what strong regrades signal about refinery behaviour. (08:06) Gasoline and naphtha: East West blowout and Cape flows The sharp move in gasoline and naphtha East West spreads, backwardation constraints, and the growing importance of Cape of Good Hope routing. (09:06) Fuel oil and sour crude risk High sulphur fuel oil strength, sour crude exposure, and the impact of rewired crude flows on product balances. (11:38) Why are cracks going up relative to crude? (14:10) Explaining strong jet regrades (15:16) What is crude worth right now? (18:34) What traders should monitor in the next 24–48 hours Key signals to watch: escalation of infrastructure attacks, the reopening or sustained closure of Hormuz, refinery run responses, crude procurement shifts, and why the “oil glut” may be irrelevant in this context.

    25 min

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In-depth analysis of current trends and future expectations for different segments of the oil market, with a focus on understanding both the supply and demand dynamics at play.

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